If one were to ask you, “who was James A. Garfield?,” you
might stumble while looking for an answer before you remembered that he was a President of the United States. His administration
lasted just 199 days, the second-shortest presidency in American history. It was cut short when he was shot
by an assassin in July 1881 and succumbed to his wounds two months later. Given the nature and volume of his
accomplishments in the few months he was active as President, there is a
lingering “what if” attached to his presidency.
What more might he have been able to accomplish in a full term? In that respect, his presidency resembles
that of a player who could be the franchise’s poster child for the question, “what
if?” Pat Peake.
James A. Garfield was born in Ohio in 1831. He was the last of the seven “log cabin”
presidents (the others being Andrew Jackson, Zachary Taylor, Millard Fillmore,
James Buchanan, Abraham Lincoln, and Ulysses S. Grant). His youth was a difficult one, losing his
father at the age of two and growing up in poverty. It was not until he reached his later teen
years that he found a particular interest in public speaking. It led him to begin a career in teaching, but
after a short time he came to the belief that a career in education would not serve his
development. He decided to pursue a
legal career.
Becoming a lawyer opened other avenues for Garfield, leading
him to accept an offer from local officials to run for a state senate seat, winning election as a Republican. When the Civil War broke out, Garfield’s
inclination was to join the Union Army, but he was prevailed upon by the
Governor of Ohio to keep his seat in the legislature. That lasted only a
short while, though. In the summer of 1861 he
accepted a commission and was eventually promoted to brigadier general. Despite the increase in rank, he was
concerned over the future of his military career and let his name be placed in
nomination to run for a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives. He won election and would serve as a member of
the Ohio delegation for more than 17 years.
By 1880, Garfield had become the leading Republican in the House. From that position, he
could be expected to exert considerable influence on the 1880 nominating
convention for the Republicans, and he was a supporter of the Secretary of the
Treasury John Sherman (brother of General William Tecumseh Sherman). Complicating the matter was that President
Ulysses S. Grant was running for an unprecedented third term in office. Those were just two candidates in what was a
crowded field to open the balloting for the nomination. Six candidates received votes on the first
ballot, and while Grant captured the most, he failed to get a majority
(Garfield received no votes on the first ballot). Things did not change much on the second
ballot, or the third. In fact, nothing
changed much over 35 ballots, Grant stuck between 304 and 313 votes, and James
G. Blaine stuck between 257 and 284 votes, with other candidates, including
Garfield, splitting the rest. Blaine finally saw
the writing on the wall after the 35th ballowt and cast his support to Garfield. On the 36th ballot, Garfield won
399 votes and the nomination.
The general election was one of those odd instances in
presidential politics in which the popular vote was extremely close (Garfield
won by fewer than 2,000 votes of more than nine million cast), while the
electoral vote margin was comfortable (Garfield: 214 – Hancock: 155).
Having won election, Garfield had to contend with warring
factions in his own party, a leftover of the convention the previous summer, but
it did not keep him from undertaking an ambitious agenda. He was a strong advocate of promoting civil
rights among African Americans, pursued civil service reform, encouraged
expanded trade (particularly with Latin America), began efforts to expand
American influence in Panama (with an eye toward building a canal there) and in
Hawaii, and began efforts to expand the Navy.
Garfield’s role in those efforts came crashing to a halt on
July 2, 1881, when he was shot twice by Charles Guiteau, a rebuffed office
seeker, at the Baltimore and Potomac Railroad Station in Washington (near what
is now the site of the National Gallery of Art West Building).
Garfield's condition improved somewhat over the next several weeks and
was even able to hold a meeting with his cabinet from his sick bed. But, his condition soon worsened, and by the
end of August had lost a considerable amount of weight (likely a product of
lingering infection brought on by his physicians searching for the bullet that
pierced his abdomen with unsterile hands and fingers). He was moved to Elberon, New Jersey, in early
September, but two weeks later, on September 18th, Garfield passed
away two months short of his 50th birthday.
Capitals fans of a certain age remember Pat Peake as a
player with immense promise unfulfilled, a victim of a moment’s
misfortune. For those fans of more
recent vintage who might vaguely recognize the name, it would be hard to
overstate the idea that Peake did nave such promise. First, consider his draft position. The Capitals took Peake with the 14th
overall pick of the 1991 draft. That
might not sound especially impressive until you realize who was taken with the
next two picks. The New York Rangers
selected Alexei Kovalev with the 15th pick, and the Pittsburgh Penguins then took Markus
Naslund. Kovalev and Naslund went on to
play a combined 2,433 regular season and 175 postseason games in the NHL, and
they would combine to score 825 regular season and 59 playoff goals over their respective careers.
Peake certainly brought the goods from amateur hockey. In 162 games over three seasons in the OHL, he
scored 138 goals and recorded 319 points.
He made the jump to the Caps in the 1993-1994 season, and when he
finished in the top-15 among rookies in goals (11) and points (29) despite
appearing in only 49 games. Among rookies appearing in at least 40 games,
he was seventh in goals-per-game and points-per-game. The sky looked to be the limit for Peake.
Things started to unravel for Peake the following
season. Mononucleosis limited him to
just 18 games, failing to score so much as a single goal that season. He rebounded in 1995-1996, going 17-19-36 in
62 games, but then he suffered the injury that would define his career as a Capital. As the 1996 playoffs
got underway, Peake was nursing a knee injury that kept him out of the lineup
for two weeks, but he returned to play in
Game 1 of the opening round series against the Pittsburgh Penguins, and he
scored a pair of power play goals in Game 2 as the Caps took a 2-0 lead in
games. The Caps lost Games 3 and 4 at
home, Peake recording only an assist in the two games. That sent the series back to Pittsburgh for
Game 5, the teams tied at two games apiece. In the second period of the
contest, Peake found himself in a footrace with Penguin defenseman J.J.
Daigneault trying to prevent an icing call.
Peake tried to hook Daigneault to get position on him, but he lost his
footing and crashed into the end boards feet-first. The impact fractured Peake’s right heel in 14
places.
The injury ended Peake’s season, and he returned to play in
only four games the following season. In
1997-1998 he missed the first 16 games of the season before returning to the
ice against the Edmonton Oilers on November 8th. In that game he injured his ankle in what would be his last NHL game, his career
over at the age of 24 (he officially retired the following September).
No one can say with any certainty that Pat
Peake would have been the sort of player to get his number retired and his banner raised to the rafters
of Verizon Center, but there is this. If
you look at his first two full seasons – his only two full seasons with the
Caps (discounting the year he lost to mononucleosis), his 38 goals in 111 games
(0.34 per game) at age 22 looks a lot like another player who had 40 goals in
125 games (0.32 per game) over his first two seasons at age 23: Peter Bondra.
It is the not knowing, the never realizing part that is so
haunting about Pat Peake’s short career with the Caps. It is not unlike the not knowing just what
sort of President that James A. Garfield might have been had he not been
assassinated six months into his first term.