<h3>"ONE AND A HALF TIMES BIGGER THAN OTHER MEN!"</h3>
<p>Most conspicuous among the host of seeming friends consistently and
constantly plotting against their chief to replace him if not actually
displace him, was Salmon P. Chase. His whole career was that of the
office-seeker incarnate. School-teacher, lawyer, governor of his State
of adoption, Ohio--for he was a New Hampshire man--he tried from 1856
all parties to nominate him for the Presidency, at all openings. His
inability to inspire trust forbade his having a personal following
of any strength. Lincoln easily saw through him, but he had a
fellow-feeling for an indubitably honest treasurer. To think of the
countless opportunities he had to enrich himself out of the public
coffers! Like another incorruptible statesman, he might have said:
"I wonder at my qualms when I had but to stretch out my hand to pocket
thousands!" But he truthfully said, when a hack impudently hinted that
he could have the nomination dearest to his heart if he would but use
to his private ends the vast patronage at his command:</p>
<p>"I should despise myself if capable of appointing or removing a man
for the sake of the Presidency."</p>
<p>In February, 1861, the Peace Congress (Massachusetts) delegation
called on the President to recommend Salmon P. Chase for the Treasury
Department. Lincoln was already favorable, for he said:</p>
<p>"From what I know and hear, I think Mr. Chase is about a hundred and
fifty to any other man's hundred for that place."</p>
<p>This is why Lincoln, when compelled to remove the underminer, solaced
him with the bed to fall upon of the Supreme Court judgeship. He said
of him: "Chase is about one and a half times bigger than any one
I ever knew."
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