Portrait of Chester A. Arthur, 21st President of the United States
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Historical · U.S. President · 21st

Chester A. Arthur

21st President of the United States · 1881–1885 · Republican

Chester A. Arthur served as 21st President of the United States (1881–1885) — one term for the Republican. The page below collects sourced biographical facts, the consequential decisions of the presidency, and the elections that put Arthur in office.

Key facts

Presidency
21st President of the United States
Born
October 5, 1829
Died
November 18, 1886
Term(s) in office
1881–1885
Total terms
1
Party
Republican
First inauguration
1881
Final term ended
1885
Dataset version
20260519

Key accomplishments

  • Served a single term (1881–1885) as Republican president.[1]
  • Lived 1829–1886 — a presidency-bracketing life that shaped the country before and after the office.[1]
  • Took the oath of office in 1881, inheriting the Article II powers of the U.S. presidency under the Constitution.[1]
  • Affiliated with the Republican party throughout the presidency, anchoring the era's partisan alignment.[1]
  • Listed in The Candidate's historical-content spine with full structural provenance — Person JSON-LD, per-section Citation chain, and a public JSON API endpoint.[1]

Sources

  1. [1]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chester_A._Arthurwikipedia · retrieved 2026-05-19

Notable quotes

Quotes for Chester A. Arthur are pending operator curation. The Task 16 admin queue will surface this row for review; ingest sources for narrative-scope provenance remain attached below.

Sources

  1. [1]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chester_A._Arthurwikipedia · retrieved 2026-05-19

Key policy positions

Curated policy positions for Chester A. Arthur are pending operator review. The biographical narrative below carries the same provenance trail and remains the canonical surface until per-topic positions are written.

Sources

  1. [1]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chester_A._Arthurwikipedia · retrieved 2026-05-19

Election results

1880 presidential election (term 1)

Won election[1]

CandidatePartyPopular voteElectoral vote
Chester A. Arthur
Opponent-level tallies pending operator curation.

Significant legislation

Per-bill legislation entries for Chester A. Arthur are pending operator curation. Era-level legislative impact appears inline in the biographical narrative below; per-bill rows will land in a follow-up sprint.

Sources

  1. [1]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chester_A._Arthurwikipedia · retrieved 2026-05-19

Biographical narrative

1,500 words · sourced from the Wikipedia REST extract

Chester A. Arthur — biography. Chester Alan Arthur (October 5, 1829 – November 18, 1886) was the 21st president of the United States, serving from 1881 to 1885. A Republican from New York, he served as the 20th vice president under President James A. Garfield in 1881, assuming the presidency after Garfield's assassination. Arthur's administration saw the largest expansion of the U.S. Navy, the end of the so-called "spoils system", and the implementation of harsher restrictions for migrants entering from abroad. Arthur was born in Fairfield, Vermont, and practiced law in New York City. He served as quartermaster general of the New York Militia during the American Civil War. Following the war, he devoted more time to New York Republican politics and quickly rose in Senator Roscoe Conkling's political organization. President Ulysses S. Grant appointed him as Collector of the Port of New York in 1871, and he was an important supporter of Conkling and the Stalwart faction of the Republican Party. In 1878, following bitter disputes between Conkling and President Rutherford B. Hayes over control of patronage in New York, Hayes fired Arthur as part of a plan to reform the federal patronage system. During the 1880 Republican National Convention, the extended contest between Grant, identified with the Stalwarts, and James G. Blaine, the candidate of the Half-Breed faction, led to the compromise selection of James Garfield as the nominee for president. Republicans then nominated Arthur for vice president to balance the ticket geographically and to placate Stalwarts disappointed by Grant's defeat. Garfield and Arthur won the 1880 presidential election and took office in March 1881. Four months into his term, Garfield was shot by an assassin; he died 11 weeks later, and Arthur assumed the presidency. As president, Arthur presided over the rebirth of the U.S. Navy, but he was criticized for failing to alleviate the federal budget surplus which had been accumulating since the end of the Civil War. Arthur vetoed the first version of the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act, arguing that its twenty-year ban on Chinese immigrants to the United States violated the Burlingame Treaty, but he signed a second version, which included a ten-year ban. He appointed Horace Gray and Samuel Blatchford to the Supreme Court. He also enforced the Immigration Act of 1882 to impose more restrictions on immigrants and the Tariff of 1883 to attempt to reduce tariffs. Arthur signed into law the Pendleton Civil Service Reform Act of 1883, which came as a surprise to reformers who held a negative opinion of Arthur as a Stalwart and product of Conkling's organization. Suffering from poor health, Arthur made only a limited effort to secure the Republican Party's nomination in 1884, and he retired at the end of his term. Arthur's failing health and political temperament combined to make his administration less active than a modern presidency, yet he earned praise among contemporaries for his solid performance in office. ### Early life === Birth and family === Chester Alan Arthur was born in Fairfield, Vermont. Arthur's mother, Malvina Stone, was born in Berkshire, Vermont, the daughter of George Washington Stone and Judith Stevens. Her family was primarily of English and Welsh descent, and her paternal grandfather, Uriah Stone, had served in the Continental Army during the American Revolution. Arthur's father, William Arthur, was born in 1796 in Dreen, Cullybackey, County Antrim, Ireland, to a Presbyterian family. William's mother was born Eliza McHarg and she married Alan Arthur. William graduated from college in Belfast and migrated to the Province of Lower Canada in 1819 or 1820. Malvina Stone met William Arthur when Arthur was teaching in Dunham, Quebec, near the Vermont border. They married in Dunham on April 12, 1821. The Arthurs moved to Vermont after the birth of their first child, Regina. They quickly moved from Burlington to Jericho, and finally to Waterville, as William received positions teaching at different schools. William Arthur also spent a brief time studying law, but while still in Waterville, he departed from both his legal studies and his Presbyterian upbringing to join the Free Will Baptists; he spent the rest of his life as a minister in that denomination. William Arthur became an outspoken abolitionist, which often made him unpopular with some members of his congregations and contributed to the family's frequent moves. In 1828, the family moved again, to Fairfield, where Chester Alan Arthur was born the following year; he was the fifth of nine children. He was named "Chester" after Chester Abell, the physician and family friend who assisted in his birth, and "Alan" for his paternal grandfather. The family remained in Fairfield until 1832, when William Arthur's profession took them to churches in several towns in Vermont and upstate New York. The family finally settled in Schenectady, New York, in 1844. Arthur had a brother, George (1836–1838), who died as a toddler, and seven siblings who lived to adulthood: Regina (1822–1910), the wife of William G. Caw, a grocer, banker, and community leader of Cohoes, New York, who served as town supervisor and village trustee Jane (1824–1842) Almeda (1825–1899), the wife of James H. Masten who served as postmaster of Cohoes and publisher of the Cohoes Cataract newspaper Ann (1828–1915), a career educator who taught school in New York and worked in South Carolina in the years immediately before and after the Civil War Malvina (1832–1920), the wife of Henry J. Haynesworth who was an official of the Confederate government and a merchant in Albany, New York, before being appointed as a captain and assistant quartermaster in the U.S. Army during Arthur's presidency William (1834–1915), a medical school graduate and career Army officer and paymaster who was wounded during his Civil War service. William Arthur retired in 1898 with the brevet rank of lieutenant colonel, and permanent rank of major. Mary (1841–1917), the wife of John E. McElroy, an Albany businessman and insurance executive, and Arthur's official White House hostess during his presidency The family's frequent moves later spawned accusations that Arthur was not a native-born citizen of the United States. When Arthur was nominated for vice president in 1880, a New York attorney and political opponent, Arthur P. Hinman, initially speculated that Arthur was born in Ireland and did not come to the United States until he was 14 years old. Had that been true, opponents might have argued that Arthur was ineligible for the vice presidency under the United States Constitution's natural-born-citizen clause. When Hinman's original story did not take root, he spread a new rumor that Arthur was born in Canada. This claim, too, failed to gain credence. === Education === Arthur spent some of his childhood years living in the New York towns of York, Perry, Greenwich, Lansingburgh, Schenectady, and Hoosick. One of his first teachers said Arthur was a boy "frank and open in manners and genial in disposition". During his time at school, he gained his first political inclinations and supported the Whig Party. He joined other young Whigs in support of Henry Clay, even participating in a brawl against students who supported James K. Polk during the 1844 United States presidential election. Arthur also supported the Fenian Brotherhood, an Irish republican organization founded in America; he showed this support by wearing a green coat. After completing his college preparation at the Lyceum of Union Village (now Greenwich) and a grammar school in Schenectady, Arthur enrolled at Union College there in 1845, where he studied the traditional classical curriculum. He was a member of the Psi Upsilon fraternity, and as a senior he was president of the debate society and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. During his winter breaks, he served as a teacher at a school in Schaghticoke. After graduating in 1848, Arthur returned to Schaghticoke and became a full-time teacher, and soon began to pursue an education in law. While studying law, he continued teaching, moving closer to home by taking a job at a school in North Pownal, Vermont. Coincidentally, future president James A. Garfield taught penmanship at the same school three years later, but the two did not cross paths during their teaching careers. In 1852, Arthur moved again, to Cohoes, New York, to become the principal of a school at which his sister, Malvina, was a teacher. In 1853, after studying at State and National Law School in Ballston Spa, New York, and then saving enough money to relocate, Arthur moved to New York City to read law at the office of Erastus D. Culver, an abolitionist lawyer and family friend. When Arthur was admitted to the New York bar in 1854, he joined Culver's firm, which was subsequently renamed Culver, Parker, and Arthur. ### Presidency === Taking office === Arthur arrived in Washington, D.C., on September 21. On September 22, he re-took the oath of office, this time before Chief Justice Morrison R. Waite. Arthur took this step to ensure procedural compliance; there had been a lingering question about whether a state court judge (Brady) could administer a federal oath of office.…

External resources

  • Wikipedia

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1880_United_States_presidential_election

  • Wikipedia

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chester_A._Arthur

  • WhiteHouse.gov

    https://www.whitehouse.gov/about-the-white-house/presidents/chester-a-arthur/

Sources & provenance

Every quantitative or attributable claim above carries a per-section [N] marker that resolves to the corresponding URL below. Each entry records the upstream provider, the canonical URL, and the timestamp at which the underlying source was retrieved by the ingest pipeline.