The determined resolve of the "free silver" members of Congress to continue the heavy monthly utterance of silver dollars redeemable at par in gold kept many business men most disquieted.
These latter two are, in the order of importance: (1) a free silver law, i.
He was chairman of the convention that renominated Harrison, reaffirmed the "American doctrine of protection," and evaded the issue of free silver.
Through the campaign of 1892 the major parties had dodged the issue of free silver by adopting evasive planks, while the general ignorance respecting the laws of money prevented the evasion from being seen.
Some thirty, who had sat in the Fifty-third Congress, joined in March, 1895, in a call for the adoption of free silver as a party measure.
Carter, of Montana, Chairman of the National Committee, and a pronounced advocate of free silver.
There had been a strong effort in the Committee on Resolutions by the silver men urging the adoption of a free silver plank, and Senator Henry M.
When the Republican national convention assembled in 1896, the die was soon cast; a declaration of opposition to free silver save by international agreement was carried by a vote of eight to one.
Even before the actual resumption of specie payment, the advocates of free silver were a power to be reckoned with, particularly in the Democratic party.
The champions of free silver replied in strident tones.
Cleveland, a consistent enemy of free silver, gave his powerful support to the gold standard and insisted on the repeal of the Silver Purchase Act, thus alienating an increasing number of his own party.
Out of the conflict over the inflation and contraction of the currency grew the struggle over "free silver" which was not ended until the campaign of 1900.
The debtor class favored in large measure bimetallism, or free silver, as a means of helping them pay debts, while the creditor class opposed it.
The direct primary in 1896 would have nominated a free silver republican, and a free silver democrat in each and every congressional district of the United States, and we would have had a solid free silver House.
The lower house of Congress actually passed a free silver bill.
Some action had to be taken to prevent a return to free silver coinage, and the measure evolved was the best obtainable.
Then it came in the guise of greenbacks, and now it comes in the garb of free silver.
When the election was held that fall, the "Free Silver" motion was overwhelmingly defeated and killed.
In 1894 William Jennings Bryan was nominated by the Chicago Convention upon the "Free Silver" platform.
A young man, barely thirty-six years old, he had already become a well-known figure in the West, where for years he had been expounding the doctrine of free silver.
Political parties were split on sectional lines: Western Republicans and Democrats alike were largely in favor of free silver, but their Eastern associates as generally took the other side.
Free silver, on the other hand, although not ignored in the earlier period, did not attain foremost rank among the demands of the dissatisfied classes until the last decade of the century and more particularly after the panic of 1898.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "free silver" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.