Park Brochure

 

Overview

This is the described version of James A. Garfield National Historic Site’s official print brochure which is two-sided and divided into four panels. Side one of the brochure gives an overview of James A. Garfield's life, "From Log Cabin To White House", as well a timeline of his life and career. Most of the text is in the center of the page while images line the edges. The background is white with black text. Side two, titled, "From Farm to Memorial" has images, text and a map highlighting different areas of the park.

 

Image Description:

This image of the Garfield Hoem which is gray and has green shutters. There are three individuals in the image, the woman is standing on the front porch and wearing a purple dress. The two men are standing on the lawn looking towards the house, they are wearing suit jackets and top hats. There are trees located on either side of the home. located behind the house is a small gray building with the same green shutters, this building was used as a campaing office. On top of that drawing of house is a portrait of President James A. Garfield, which is inside a circle.

Image Caption:

Conducting a "front porch" campaign from his Ohio home. James A. Garfield changed the style of presidential politics. The home is shown as it appeared in 1880. Phoro credit: Both- NPS.

Image Description:

Image is located to the left of text. Shows two young adults sitting for an engagement photo. James A. Garfield is on the left wearing a jacket and tie while Lucretia R. Garfield is on the right wearing a dark dress with a white collar.

Image Caption:

James A. Garfield and Lucretia Rudolph at the time of their engagement, 1858. Photo credit: Western Reserve Historical Society.

Image Description:

This a frontal view of the Garfield farm. A white fence sets in front of a white farm house with barns located to right of the house in the black and white photo.

Image Caption:


James Garfield purchased the Mentor, OH, farm from Harriet Dickey in 1876. In 1880 he enlarged the main house from the modest building seen here to the 20-room structure show at top. Photo credit: Hiram College

Image Description:

A Garfield family photo. From left to right: Abram (seated), James, Lucretia (seated), Mollie, James (seated), Harry, and Irvin (seated) and their grandmother Eliza Ballou Garfield is seated on the right of the black and white photo.

 

Text: From Log Cabin To White House

By the time of his death at age 49 in 1881, James Abram Garfield had benn a teacher, college principal, minister, state legislator. lawyer, Civil War general, congressman, U.S. Senator-elect, and president of the United States. Born in Orange Township, Ohio, in November 1831, he was the youngest of four children born to Abram and Eliza Ballou Garfield. They had carved a farm out of the frontier of Ohio's Western Reserve. James was almost two when his father died, leaving the family in poverty. At 16 James took a job as a tow boy on the Ohio canals. His canal career ended after six weeks when he got malaria and had to return home.

In 1851 James entered the Western Reserve Eclectic Institute (later Hiram College) in Ohio. In 1854 he enrolled at Williams College in Massachusetts, graduating with honors in 1856. Garfield's speaking ability gained him leadershio positions, including principal of the Eclectic Institute in 1857. That same year he began preaching in northeast Ohio. In 1858 he married Lucretia Rudolph and was elected to the Ohio Senate on an antislavery platform in 1859.

When the Civil War began in 1861, Garfield became lieutenant colonel of the 42nd Ohio Volunteer Infantry. Given brigade command in 1862, he won minor victories in Kentucky and was promoted. These and other military accomplishments led to his 1862 election to the US of Representatives. Congress did not meet until December 1863, so he served as chief of staff to Maj. Gen. William S. Rosecrans through the 1863 Chickamauga campaign in Georgia and Tennessee.

Garfield's congressional career lasted 17 years. As head of the House Appropriations Committee 1871-75, he managed the nation's finances, reduced government spending, and fought inflation. He pushed for civil service reform to end abuses of the patronage system. He took a moderate stance on protective tariffs, a major issue in the 1880 campaign.

Elected to the US Senate in January 1880, he was asked to nominate John Sherman for president at the Republican National Convention in Chicago. When the convention deadlocked, Garfield became the nominee. He was elected 20th US president in November and inaugurated in March 1881. His term was cut short on July 2 when he was shot by Charles Guiteau, a political fanatic. President James A. Garfield died on September 19.

Image Description:


Below this text is James A. Garfield's signature in a gray font.

Image Caption:


Signature. Photo Credit: NPS
 

Image Description:

This image is located at the bottom of the front side of the brochure and to the left of a timeline of James' political career. Titled "Farmer Garfield Cutting a Swath to the White House." In the image James A. Garfield is seen as a farm swinging an ax towards weeds which represent waste and corruption in Washington during his president campaign in 1880.

Image Caption:

This Currier & Ives political cartoon portrays candidate Garfield as a farmer cutting away weeds of waste and corruption in his 1880 presidential campaign. Photo credit: Ohio Historical Society.

 

Timeline Text: President Garfield's Life and Career

1831 Born Nov. 19, the last US president born in a log cabin.

1848 Works six weeks as boat tow boy on Ohio canals.

1849 Enters Geauga Seminary in Chester, OH.

1851 Enters Western Reserve Eclectic Institute (now Hiram College) in Ohio.

1854-56 Graduates from Eclectic Institute. Enrolls in Williams College in Massaschusetts; graduates in two years.

1857 Becomes principal of Eclectic Institute; becomes a Disciples of Christ minister.

1858 Marries Lucretia Rudolph, Nov. 11. Over the years seven children are born; five survive to adulthood.

1859 Elected to Ohio Senate; studies law.

1861 Admitted to bar; Civil War begins; appointed lieutenant colonel, 42nd Ohio Infantry.

1862 Wins battles in Kentucky; promoted to brigadier general at Battle of Shiloh, TN; elected to Congress.

1863 Chief of staff to Gen. William S. Rosecrans; resigns from Army to serve in 38th Congress.

1876 Garfields buy farm in Mentor, OH.

1880 Elected to US Seante; Republican presidential nominee; conducts "front porch" campaign at Lawnfield; elected president.

1881 Inaugurated in March; shot and mortally wounded July 2; dies in Elberon, NJ; Sept. 19; entombed in Lake View Cemetery, Cleveland.

Image Description:


This image is to the right of the timeline on the bottom portion of the brochure. It is a funeral memoria ribbon with candidate Garfield's face in the center and the words James A. Garfield President U.S.A., Born November 19th 1831, Inaugurated March 4, 1881, Assasinated July 2nd, 1881, Died Sept. 19, 1881. Memorial Service: Sycamore, Ill., Sept. 26th, A.D. 1881.

Image Caption:


Garfield funeral memorial ribbon. Photo credit: Smithsonian Institute.


 

Side 2 Text and Image: The Garfield Home

A modern colorized photo ahows the Garfield Home today with gray siding and a red roof. The sky is blue with a few clouds as well as there being trees that surround the home of each side.

Image Descriptions:


There are three small photos on the left-side of the brochure. From top to bottom they are First Lady Lucretia R. Garfield, a drawing of a small building which would become a campaign office during the campaign season, and finally a view of inside the memorial library located insdie the home.

Image Captions:


James Garfield called his wife Lucretia 'one of the coolest and best-balanced women I ever saw." After his death, she stayed at Lawnfield, making it the focus of extended family life and a memorial to his work. Photo credit: Library of Congress.

Garfield once kept books and papers in the small building he used as his 1880 campaign office. His books are now in the Memorial LIbrary that Lucretia added to the main house 1885-86. Photo Credits: Campaign Office: NPS, Library: Michael Carpenter Photography.

Text: From Farm To Memorial

When James A. Garfield bought the Dickey farm in November 1876 he hoped it would become a place "where I can put my boys at work, and teach them farming" and "where I can touch the earth and get some strength from it." The property had been neglected and needed repairs. By the spring of 1880, Garfield had improved the landscape and transformed the nine-room, one-and-a-half-story farm house into a expansive 20-room, two-and-a-half story structure.

In summer 1880 the farm- reporters named it Lawnfield- became the backdrop fro Garfield's successful presidential bid.Breaking from the tradition of previous candidates who remained in the background during elections, he waged a precedent-setting "front porch" campaign, paving the way for future presidential races.

Dignitaries, students, well-wishers, and political supporters came to hear the Republican candidate talk about patriotism, protective tariffs, labor, and other issues of the day. The center of activity was a small library building that Garfield converted into his headquarters, equipping it with a telegraph.

Promoting a Legacy After the president's assassination, Lucretia Garfield and her family lived comfortably at Lawnfield. Thanks to contributions from the public, she was able to make improvements. In the 1880s she added a wing to the main house to serve as a presidential library, a vault to safeguard her husband's books and papers, and a monument to the president's memory.

Lucretia oversaw construction of a farm manager's residence; a gasholder to provide fuel for cooking, heating, and lighting; a chicken coop; a carriage house; and a windmill to supply water. She also relocated the 1877 horse barn-one of the few structures remaining from Garfield's time-and a grananry, which most likely dated to the Dickey era.

Lucretia Garfield died at her winter home in California on March 13, 1918, at age 8. After her death the family kept Lawnfield until 1936, then donated it to the Western Reserve Historical Society. In 1980 Congress authorized the James A. Garfield National Historic Site. Here you can learn about the life and legacy of the 20th president of the United States.



 

Text: Things To See And Do

Map Description:
The map is located to the left of text about what to see and do at the site. It shops a small piece of northeast Ohio which includes James A. Garfield's birthplace cabin in Moreland Hills, his home here in Mentor, and his final reating place at Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland.

Text:
James A. Garfield National Historic Site is open daily May through October, with limited days and hours the rest of the year. Check the website for details.

The visitor center in the former carriage house has information, exhibits, a park film, restrooms, and a bookstore.

Accessibility We strive to make our facilities, programs, and services accessible to all. The visitor center, restrooms, and first and second floors in the main house are acccessible to persons in wheelchairs.

What To See and Do The site includes the main house and memorial library (guided tours only), 1880 campaign office, 1893 carriage house, other outbuildings, and windmill. MOst furnishings in the main house belonged to the Garfield family.

Tours Self-guided cell phone tours are available. Tours of the main house are scheduled regularly. Space may be limited and group tours require advance reservations. Call for schedule and fees.

For a full list of park regulations, including firearms information, visit the park website.

Nearby Garfield Sites

  • James A. Garfield birthplace site at Moreland Hills. Historical marker, replica cabin, Garfield statue, and trail to the site of the original cabin. (440) 248-1188.
  • James A. Garfield memorial and tomb. Lake View Cemetery. (216) 421-2665; www.lakeviewcemetery.com.
More Information

James A. Garfield National Historic Site is of over 400 parks in the National Park Service. To learn more about national parks and National Park Service programs, visit www.nps.gov.

James A. Garfield National Historic Site
8095 Mentor Avenue
Mentor, OH 44060
(440) 255-8722
www.nps.gov/jaga

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Last updated: October 15, 2020

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Contact Info

Mailing Address:

8095 Mentor Avenue
Mentor, OH 44060

Phone:

440-255-8722
If your call is not answered, please leave a voicemail and we will return your call as soon as possible. You can also e-mail us at jaga_interpretation@nps.gov.

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