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Thursday, April 2, 2026

American Blogmanac Civil War Project: Countdown To Fort Sumter - Arpril 2nd, 1861: A Split Lincoln Cabinet & Charleston Harbor Preparations

A Daily Look at the Final Days Before Fort Sumter: 10 Days Remain As A Nation Unravels

Tuesday, April 2, 1861. On this day the Lincoln administration finds itself divided and uneasy. The president has still not publicaly announced his final decision on the fort, and his Cabinet is splitting into two camps: those who believe Sumter must be evacuated to avoid provoking war, and those who insist that surrendering it would signal weakness and encourage further secession. Lincoln listens carefully to both sides but reveals nothing, and his silence becomes a political force of its own. Secretary of State William Seward continues his quiet, unauthorized diplomacy, hinting to Southern intermediaries that compromise may be possible, while Southern commissioners in Washington grow increasingly frustrated, convinced they are being misled. With Congress out of session, the president alone must navigate the crisis, and the political atmosphere tightens with every passing hour.

Kentucky Watches the Crisis with Grave Concern—Families Divided
Louisville Daily Journal, April 2, 1861

Legally, the situation grows more tangled. The Lincoln administration refuses to recognize the Confederate government in any formal capacity, while Southern commissioners insist they are diplomats representing a sovereign nation. This standoff ensures that every communication remains unofficial and unstable. Behind the scenes, federal lawyers debate whether the president has constitutional authority to resupply a fort in a state claiming to have seceded, whether he can use force without congressional approval, and what exactly constitutes “invasion” under the Constitution. No one has clear answers, and the law itself seems to bend under the weight of events.

Meanwhile, Charleston Harbor prepares for war. Confederate batteries continue strengthening their positions, mounting more guns and receiving more ammunition as volunteers pour into the city. General P.G.T. Beauregard receives increasingly urgent instructions from Montgomery to be ready for any attempt to reinforce Sumter. Inside the fort, Major Robert Anderson’s men ration their dwindling supplies, morale steady but strained as they wait for relief that may or may not come. Rumors swirl that a Union expedition is being prepared in New York, and Charleston newspapers treat this as nearly certain.

Economically, the cost of secession becomes more visible. Northern merchants report declining Southern trade, Southern ports feel the early effects of isolation, cotton shipments stall, insurance rates rise, and railroads in border states see shrinking freight traffic as businesses hesitate to commit to long‑term contracts. The economy is not collapsing, but it is tightening, and everyone feels the pressure.

“The air is full of rumors. We are on the tiptoe of expectation.”
— Mary Boykin Chesnut, Diary Entry for April 2, 1861

Across the country, the social mood is one of anxious anticipation. Northern newspapers debate whether Lincoln is strong enough to preserve the Union, while Southern crowds gather around telegraph offices for the latest rumors from Washington. Border‑state families argue at dinner tables about loyalty and identity, and churches pray for peace even as many sermons acknowledge that peace may no longer be possible. In Charleston, the atmosphere is electric: rooftops fill with spectators watching the fort, women sketch the harbor defenses in their diaries, and men speak openly of war as a matter of days, not weeks. The nation holds its breath as April begins, and April 2 feels like a hinge — a day when the crisis stops being theoretical and becomes immediate. The political center wobbles, the military fuse shortens, and the public mood tightens. Uncertainty rules the day, and no one knows what the next day will bring.

A rooftop in Charleston Harbor with spectators watching Fort Sumter, April 2nd, 1861

United States History On This Date: April 2

1513 — Ponce de León Sights and Claims Florida
Spanish explorer Juan Ponce de León sighted and claimed Florida for Spain after landing near present‑day St. Augustine. His arrival marked the beginning of sustained European interest in the region, shaping centuries of colonial competition in North America.
1792 — Congress Establishes the First U.S. Mint
Congress formally created the United States Mint in Philadelphia, laying the foundation for a unified national currency. The Mint’s establishment helped stabilize early American commerce and symbolized the young nation’s growing financial independence.
1863 — The Richmond Bread Riot Erupts
A severe food shortage in the Confederate capital triggered the Richmond Bread Riot, as desperate residents—many of them women—looted shops demanding relief. President Jefferson Davis personally intervened, highlighting the Confederacy’s deepening internal strain.
1865 — Lee Orders the Evacuation of Richmond
General Robert E. Lee informed President Jefferson Davis that Richmond could no longer be defended, prompting the Confederate government to flee the capital. The evacuation signaled the imminent collapse of the Confederacy’s political center.

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

United States History On This Date: April 1

1841—President William Henry Harrison's Health Declines
A Washington paper reports on April 1, that Harrison's health was decidedly better. In fact, Harrison's condition had seriously weakened, and Cabinet members and family were summoned to the White House—his wife Anna had remained in Ohio due to her own illness. According to papers in Washington on Friday, Harrison had rallied, despite a Baltimore Sun report that his condition was of a "more dangerous character".
1863 — Civil War: Battle of Suffolk Begins
Union forces under Maj. Gen. John A. Dix began defending Suffolk, Virginia, against Confederate troops led by Gen. James Longstreet. The engagement protected vital Union supply lines and demonstrated how even secondary theaters played crucial roles in the broader Civil War campaign.
1918 — U.S. Forces Enter Major Combat in World War I
Although the United States declared war in 1917, April 1, 1918 marked the first significant American‑led combat operations on the Western Front. The arrival of fresh U.S. troops boosted Allied morale and signaled a turning point in the long‑stalemated conflict.
1865 — Civil War: Battle of Five Forks
Confederate forces under Gen. George Pickett suffered a decisive defeat at Five Forks, Virginia. The loss shattered the defensive line protecting Petersburg and Richmond, accelerating the collapse of the Confederacy during the war’s final, desperate days.

American Blogmanac Civil War Project: Countdown To Fort Sumter - Arpril 1st, 1861: A Union Naval Expedition Quietly Prepares For Resupply & The Deepening Constitutional Crisis

A Daily Look at the Final Days Before Fort Sumter: 11 Days Remain As A Nation Unravels

Monday, April 1st, 1861.  William Howard Russell, correspondent for The Times of London, moved through Washington’s boarding houses, hotel lobbies, and government offices, listening to the rumors swirling around Fort Sumter. He noted the strange mixture of paralysis and panic gripping the capital. Cabinet members contradicted one another, senators whispered in corners, and every clerk claimed to possess inside information. Russell carried with him the hard-earned instincts of a man who had covered the Crimean War, the coronation of Tsar Alexander II, and the Sepoy Rebellion of 1857.

He knew how to sift rumor from substance. Nervous and hesitant Cabinet officials, divided in their counsel to the President; senators pursuing their own agendas while dutifully toeing party lines; clerks eager to impress the foreign correspondent by pretending to know more than they did — Russell absorbed it all. He wove these fragments into the foundation of credible dispatches for London, where anxious British markets were clamoring for any scrap of reliable information he could send.

William Howard Russell, The Times of London — April 1, 1861

“Men speak in whispers of what may come. The air is thick with rumor, and yet no one knows the truth of the matter.”

While Russell made his round the day marked a quiet but decisive turning point inside the Lincoln administration. After weeks of hesitation, internal division, and contradictory Cabinet advice, Lincoln moved toward initiating Gustavus V. Fox’s plan to resupply Fort Sumter. Seward kept pursuing his campaign pressing for a conciliatory withdrawal to avoid war, but Lincoln increasingly rejects that path, concluding that abandoning Sumter would signal federal impotence and embolden the Confederacy.

Fox’s proposal — the naval expedition Lincoln finally agreed to using small steam launches to slip supplies into the fort under cover of darkness — now became the administration’s working plan. Lincoln had not yet announce it publicly, but he began to issue the preliminary orders needed to set it in motion.

In Montgomery, Confederate leaders sensed the shift. Their patience is nearly exhausted, and they interpret any federal attempt to reinforce Sumter as an act of war. The political atmosphere on both sides has tightened: Lincoln is preparing to act, and the Confederacy is preparing to respond.

The constitutional crisis deepened.  The legal mechanism to address the seizure of federal property by a self‑declared government was still elusive, and Attorney General Edward Bates continued drafting internal opinions asserting that secession is legally void. Yet these opinions remained unpublished, leaving lower government officials and the public in a fog of uncertainty.

In the Confederacy, legal theorists work feverishly to justify their new nation’s legitimacy, arguing that the compact theory of the Constitution granted states the right to withdraw. The two constitutional visions — perpetual Union vs. voluntary compact — now stood in open, irreconcilable conflict.

Major Robert Anderson’s situation inside Fort Sumter grows more desperate by the hour. Supplies are nearly gone; the garrison can hold out only days longer. Confederate forces under General P.G.T. Beauregard continue strengthening their batteries, tightening the noose around the fort. New guns are mounted, ranges recalculated, and firing arcs refined. Every Confederate action signaled readiness for a decisive strike.

In Washington, naval planners debate whether Fox’s relief mission can break through Charleston Harbor’s defenses — and whether attempting it will ignite the war everyone fears.

Northern markets remained jittery and unsettled as the crisis draged on. Merchants repeatedly warned that a Confederate attack on Sumter could disrupt coastal shipping and international trade. Insurance rates on Southern cargo continue to rise sharply.

In the South, the Confederate economy strains under the weight of mobilization. Cotton remains the only real asset, and planters debated whether withholding exports might force Britain or France to intervene diplomatically. But with no established treasury, no credit system, and no industrial base, the Confederacy’s economic future looked increasingly precarious.

Charleston Mercury — April 1, 1861
SUMTER MUST FALL — NO MORE DELAY FROM MONTGOMERY
Confederate Patience Exhausted as Batteries Tighten Around the Fort.

Public sentiment continued to harden across the country. In the North, newspapers debated whether the Union should fight to preserve itself or compromise to avoid bloodshed. Crowds gather around telegraph offices, hungry for news from Charleston.

In the South, secessionist enthusiasm remains high, but beneath the surface lies growing anxiety — families fear the consequences of war, and enslaved people watch events closely, sensing that the coming conflict may reshape their world.

The nation continued to feel suspended in a moment of unbearable tension, as if everyone knew the window for peace is closing.

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

On This Date American History Blogmanac Honors the 45th Vice President of the United States Abert Arnold Gore, Jr.

On March 31, 1948, Albert Arnold Gore Jr. entered the world in Washington, D.C., the son of Senator Albert Gore Sr. and Pauline LaFon Gore. Raised between the capital and the hills of Tennessee, Gore grew up with politics in his bloodstream and public service woven into the fabric of his family life.

Gore’s path to national leadership began early. After graduating from Harvard in 1969, he served in the U.S. Army during the Vietnam War before returning home to Tennessee, where he launched his political career. At just 28, he won a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives, serving four terms before moving to the Senate in 1985. His reputation as a pragmatic, technologically minded moderate — sometimes called an “Atari Democrat” — marked him as a rising figure in a rapidly changing political era.

In 1992, Bill Clinton selected Gore as his running mate, and together they won the election that ushered in a new Democratic administration. On January 20, 1993, Gore was sworn in as the 45th Vice President of the United States, a role he would hold for two full terms — the first Democrat to do so since John Nance Garner.

As vice president, Gore became a central figure in the administration’s work on technology, government modernization, and environmental policy. His advocacy for climate action, which would later earn him the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize, became one of the defining commitments of his public life.

Though his 2000 presidential bid ended in one of the closest and most contested elections in American history, Gore’s influence only expanded in the years that followed. Through books, documentaries, and global activism, he transformed himself into one of the world’s most recognizable voices on climate change.

Today, on his birthday, we remember Al Gore not only as a vice president and statesman, but as a figure whose work continues to shape the national and global conversation about our planet’s future.

“Al Gore receiving the Presidential Medal of Freedom on May 3, 2024, awarded by President Joe Biden during a White House ceremony.”

American Blogmanac Civil War Project: Countdown To Fort Sumter - March 31st, 1861: British Editorials & A Quiet Sunday Simmering

A Daily Look at the Final Days Before Fort Sumter: 12 Days Remain As A Nation Unravels

Sunday, March 31st, 1861.  Washington is hushed. Sunday has brought a pause in official business, but not in speculation. President Lincoln settled into his reserved front row pew seat as the congregation for the New York Avenue Presbyterian Church slowly drifted in with fewer attendees than normal.  Reverend Gurley glanced at his sermon notes before peering down from his elevated lectern at the President sitting alone and expressionless looking very much deep in thought.  With rumors and speculation swirling around Washington in the back of his mind the Reverand opened with Psalm 25:4 — “Show me thy ways, O Lord; teach me thy paths.” The verse echoed through the pews as Lincoln sat in silence without looking up, his decision still unspoken.

Cabinet members kept to their homes, but political visitors still called. Rumors swirled that Lincoln had made his decision regarding Fort Sumter but was waiting for the right moment to announce it. Seward, still advocating evacuation, spent the day in quiet reflection, while Chase and Blair met privately with allies to prepare for a possible military move.

In Charleston, Confederate leaders grew restless. Telegrams from Montgomery urged Beauregard to remain alert. The Confederate commissioners in Washington sent another message to Jefferson Davis: “No answer yet. The silence is ominous.”

The Baltimore Sun — March 31, 1861
WASHINGTON QUIET — NO WORD FROM THE PRESIDENT
Dispatches report a silent administration as the Sumter question remains unresolved.

The legal debate over secession continued in pamphlets and sermons. Northern clergy used the pulpit to argue that the Union was divinely ordained and that rebellion was a sin. Southern ministers countered with sermons on self-determination and resistance to tyranny.

Attorney General Bates spent part of the day reviewing correspondence from federal judges in the North, many of whom were preparing to issue rulings on property seizures and loyalty oaths. The legal machinery of war was beginning to stir, even if no shots had yet been fired.

In Richmond, the Confederate Congress adjourned for the Sabbath, but legal advisors continued drafting wartime statutes. The Confederate legal framework was evolving rapidly, with new laws on tariffs, conscription, and foreign recognition under review.

Charleston Harbor was quiet but tense. Beauregard ordered limited drills to avoid provoking the garrison at Fort Sumter, but his officers remained on high alert. The batteries were fully manned, and signal flags were kept ready in case of sudden movement.

Inside Fort Sumter, Major Anderson led a brief Sunday service for his men. The garrison was exhausted, hungry, and increasingly resigned to their fate. Anderson noted in his journal: “We are near the end. Our provisions will not last the week.”

In New York, Gustavus Fox finalized his plan for the relief expedition. He met with naval officers and reviewed the readiness of the ships. The operation was nearly set — awaiting only Lincoln’s final word.

Markets were closed, but anxiety simmered. Merchants in New York and Boston spent the day reviewing contracts and preparing contingency plans. Insurance brokers warned that any clash at Sumter would trigger immediate rate hikes on Southern cargo.

In Charleston, port activity slowed further. British ships remained offshore, hesitant to dock amid rumors of imminent conflict. Local merchants complained that Montgomery had not provided enough clarity on Confederate trade policy, and some began hoarding goods in anticipation of blockade.

Across the Atlantic, British newspapers published editorials warning that war in America would disrupt cotton supplies and destabilize global markets. The economic fuse was lit.

Sunday brought a moment of spiritual reflection across the divided nation. Churches in the North preached unity and peace. Congregations sang hymns like “My Country, ’Tis of Thee” with renewed fervor. In the South, sermons emphasized honor, resistance, and divine favor for the Confederate cause.

Families gathered for quiet meals, but conversation inevitably turned to the crisis. In Charleston, citizens walked the Battery, watching Fort Sumter in the distance. Children played near the cannons, unaware of the storm about to break.

Mary Boykin Chesnut — Diary Entry, March 31, 1861
“Sunday. A peaceful Sunday enough, but for the incessant sound of the drum and fife.”
A Diary from Dixie (public domain)

In Washington, the streets were subdued. Telegraph offices were closed, and newspaper presses slowed. But everyone knew Monday would bring movement — and possibly, the final step toward war.

United States History On This Day: March 31

March 31, 1776 — Abigail Adams Writes “Remember the Ladies”
Abigail Adams urged John Adams to “remember the ladies” as he helped shape new laws for the emerging nation. Her letter challenged the exclusion of women from political rights and became an early touchstone in American women’s history.
March 31, 1870 — Thomas Mundy Peterson Votes
Thomas Mundy Peterson became the first African American known to vote under the Fifteenth Amendment. His ballot in a local referendum symbolized Reconstruction’s early promise and the expanding, though fragile, landscape of Black citizenship.
March 31, 1917 — U.S. Takes Possession of the Virgin Islands
The United States formally assumed control of the Virgin Islands, purchased from Denmark for $25 million. The transfer strengthened American strategic presence in the Caribbean during World War I and began a new chapter in the islands’ political status.
March 31, 1968 — LBJ Withdraws from the Presidential Race
President Lyndon B. Johnson shocked the nation by announcing he would not seek re‑election. Delivered amid the Vietnam War and domestic unrest, his decision reshaped the 1968 campaign and marked a dramatic turning point in modern presidential politics.

Thomas Mundy Peterson, first African American to cast a vote under the 15th Amendment

Monday, March 30, 2026

American Blogmanac Civil War Project: Countdown To Fort Sumter - March 30th 1861: Rumors, Northern Markets & Constitutional Crisis

A Daily Look at the Final Days Before Fort Sumter: 13 Days Remain As A Nation Unravels

Saturday, March 30th, 1861. Washington awoke to a city buzzing with rumors after yesterday’s Cabinet meeting. Word had leaked—though nothing official was said—that Lincoln had moved closer to a decision on Fort Sumter. The President remained silent, but the political class sensed a shift. Senators, diplomats, and newspaper correspondents spent the morning calling on Cabinet members, hoping to extract hints about the administration’s intentions.

Seward, still advocating evacuation, quietly continued his diplomatic outreach. He met with several foreign envoys, including British Minister Lyons, who reiterated the anxiety in London’s commercial circles. Seward, ever the strategist, hoped that emphasizing the global economic consequences might still sway Lincoln toward a peaceful withdrawal.

But others in the administration—Chase, Welles, and Blair—were increasingly confident that Lincoln had resolved to act. Their allies in Congress began preparing the political ground for a firm response to secession, framing the moment as a test of national resolve.

In Charleston, Confederate leaders sensed the change. Reports from Washington suggested that Lincoln was no longer paralyzed by indecision. The Confederate government in Montgomery instructed its commissioners in Washington to press Seward for clarity, but Seward continued to stall, unwilling to reveal the President’s hand.

Charleston Mercury — March 30, 1861
FORT SUMTER STILL HELD — WASHINGTON SILENT
Confederate Batteries Strengthen Their Position — Rumors of a Federal Fleet Persist — Montgomery Awaits Lincoln’s Decision.

The legal crisis deepened as the weekend began. The federal government still lacked any judicial ruling on the constitutionality of secession, leaving the entire crisis suspended in a constitutional void.

Attorney General Edward Bates, having delivered his opinion the previous day, spent March 30 refining additional notes on federal authority. His argument—that the Union was perpetual and that the government had both the right and duty to hold its property—circulated quietly among key Republican lawmakers. It provided intellectual ammunition for those urging Lincoln to stand firm.

Meanwhile, in the Confederacy, the provisional Congress continued drafting wartime legislation. New measures aimed at regulating commerce and securing revenue signaled that the break with the Union was not temporary but intended to be permanent.

The legal lines were hardening, even if no court had yet spoken.

Though Lincoln’s decision was not yet public, preparations were already underway. Naval officers in New York and Norfolk received discreet instructions to ready vessels for possible deployment. Gustavus Fox, the architect of the Sumter relief plan, spent the day reviewing charts, tides, and harbor conditions, refining the timing of the nighttime boat insertion.

In Charleston Harbor, Confederate General P.G.T. Beauregard intensified drills. Reports from his scouts suggested unusual activity in Northern ports, and he suspected a relief expedition was imminent. He ordered additional ammunition distributed to the harbor batteries and instructed his officers to maintain heightened vigilance.

Inside Fort Sumter, Major Robert Anderson recorded in his journal that the garrison’s food supply was nearly exhausted. He estimated they had less than a week before starvation forced surrender.

The military clock was ticking.

Northern financial markets remained unsettled. Saturday brought no new clarity from Washington, and uncertainty continued to drive fluctuations in shipping insurance and commodity prices. Merchants in Boston and New York began quietly adjusting contracts, anticipating that any conflict at Sumter would disrupt coastal trade.

In the South, the Confederate economy showed early signs of strain. Cotton shipments slowed further as European buyers hesitated to commit to new purchases. Charleston merchants complained that credit was tightening, and rumors circulated that the Confederate government might soon need to issue additional short‑term loans to cover expenses.

Across the Atlantic, British newspapers warned that a clash at Sumter could send cotton prices soaring and disrupt textile production in Lancashire.

Public sentiment grew more anxious as the weekend unfolded. Northern newspapers published speculative editorials about Lincoln’s intentions, with some insisting that reinforcement was imminent and others predicting evacuation. Crowds gathered outside telegraph offices, hoping for updates from Washington.

In the South, Charleston residents spent the warm Saturday afternoon strolling along the Battery, watching the harbor fortifications. The sight of Confederate soldiers drilling on the sandbars had become a daily ritual. Rumors spread that a Union fleet had already sailed, though no one could confirm it.

Churches prepared Sunday sermons addressing the crisis. In the North, ministers urged patience and national unity. In the South, many framed the moment as a test of Southern honor and divine favor.

Families divided between North and South exchanged increasingly urgent letters, each side pleading with the other to avoid war—even as events moved steadily toward it.

United States History On This Date: March 30

March 30, 1822 — Florida Becomes a U.S. Territory
The United States formally organized the Florida Territory, transforming a contested borderland into an official part of the nation. The shift accelerated settlement, expanded plantation agriculture, and increased pressure on Seminole communities, setting the stage for decades of conflict and eventual statehood in 1845.
March 30, 1867 — Alaska Purchase Agreement Signed
Secretary of State William H. Seward agreed to purchase Alaska from Russia for $7.2 million. Mocked as “Seward’s Folly,” the acquisition later proved strategically and economically valuable. The transfer reshaped U.S. influence in the North Pacific and introduced new governance over Indigenous homelands.
March 30, 1870 — Fifteenth Amendment Certified
The Fifteenth Amendment was certified, guaranteeing voting rights regardless of race or previous enslavement. It marked a major Reconstruction milestone and briefly expanded Black political participation. Despite later suppression, the amendment remains a cornerstone of constitutional protections for voting rights.
March 30, 1981 — President Reagan Shot
President Ronald Reagan was wounded outside the Washington Hilton by John Hinckley Jr. Reagan, Press Secretary James Brady, and two others were injured. The event reshaped presidential security and later inspired major gun‑control legislation tied to Brady’s long‑term injuries.

This map from 1803 shows the boundries of East Florida and West Florida.  Also shown is the northern boundry of West Florida during the American Revolution in 1776


Sunday, March 29, 2026

This Month Here At American History Blogmanac We Honor Our 38th Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey: "The Happy Warrior" & Civil Rights Advocate

Today we celebrate a March birthday of former Vice President Humbert H. Humphrey. On March 27, 1911, in the small prairie town of Wallace, South Dakota, Hubert Horatio Humphrey Jr. was born into modest circumstances that belied the towering legacy he would leave in American public life. A pharmacist’s son with a gift for words and a heart for justice, Humphrey would rise to become one of the most influential liberal voices of the 20th century — a senator, vice president, and presidential nominee whose career spanned the most turbulent decades of modern American history.

Humphrey’s early years were shaped by the Depression and the New Deal, and he carried those lessons into a life of public service. After earning degrees from the University of Minnesota and Louisiana State University, he entered politics with a passion for civil rights, labor protections, and economic fairness. His electrifying speech at the 1948 Democratic National Convention — urging the party to “get out of the shadow of states’ rights and walk forthrightly into the bright sunshine of human rights” — marked him as a moral force in national politics.

As a senator from Minnesota, Humphrey championed landmark legislation, including the Civil Rights Act of 1964. His tireless work earned him the nickname “The Happy Warrior,” a nod to his boundless optimism and relentless energy. In 1964, he became Lyndon B. Johnson’s vice president, serving during the height of the Vietnam War and the Great Society reforms. Though his loyalty to Johnson’s war policy cost him dearly in the 1968 presidential election, Humphrey remained a respected elder statesman and returned to the Senate in 1971.

Humphrey’s legacy is one of compassion, conviction, and courage. He believed politics was a noble calling — a means to uplift the poor, protect the vulnerable, and expand the promise of democracy. His speeches were filled with hope, his campaigns with laughter, and his policies with purpose.

Today, on his birthday, we remember Hubert Humphrey not only as a vice president and senator, but as a man who saw politics as a moral endeavor — and who never stopped believing in the power of good people to do great things.

Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey campaigning for President of the United States, 1968