American politician
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Also known as: Benjamin Ryan Tillman, Pitchfork Ben Tillman
Ben Tillman
Ben Tillman
In full:
Benjamin Ryan Tillman
Byname:
Pitchfork Ben Tillman
Born:
August 11, 1847, Edgefield county, South Carolina, U.S.
Died:
July 3, 1918, Washington, D.C. (aged 70)
Political Affiliation:
Democratic Party
Role In:
Jim Crow law

Ben Tillman (born August 11, 1847, Edgefield county, South Carolina, U.S.—died July 3, 1918, Washington, D.C.) was an outspoken U.S. populist politician who championed agrarian reform and white supremacy. Tillman served as governor of South Carolina (1890–94) and was a member of the U.S. Senate (1895–1918).

Tillman was born into a wealthy family of enslavers. He was a member of the Edgefield Hussars, one of the rifle clubs that arose in opposition to the Reconstruction-era Republican state government in South Carolina and that collectively evolved into the Red Shirts, the paramilitary arm of the state’s Democratic Party, which employed terrorist intimidation and violence in pursuit of its white supremacist agenda. Throughout his political career, Tillman bragged about his participation in the Hamburg Massacre of July 1876, in which Red Shirts attacked a Black militia, overwhelming it and then executing several of its members.

As a Democrat, he emerged in politics during the 1880s as a spokesman for the interests of poor rural whites in South Carolina, which he argued were undermined by those of the ruling white (“Bourbon”) aristocracy as well as by the aspirations of the state’s African Americans and whites who shared them. The rise of Tillman coincided with the decline of the political fortunes of former Confederate general Wade Hampton, the state’s most prominent Bourbon. Elected governor in 1890, Tillman translated his populist rhetoric into a number of concrete reforms. He shifted the tax burden to the wealthy, improved public education, founded the agricultural college later to be known as Clemson University, and regulated the railroads. He also played an instrumental role in rewriting the state constitution in 1895 to disenfranchise Blacks and circumvent the Fifteenth Amendment through a patchwork of Jim Crow laws. An unabashed racist who prominently championed white supremacy on the national stage, Tillman considered lynching an acceptable law-enforcement measure.

Elected to the U.S. Senate in 1894, Tillman served until his death, continuing to press for agrarian reform on the national level. He bitterly assailed Pres. Grover Cleveland for his hard-money policy, supporting instead the free-silver program of William Jennings Bryan. In most instances, he opposed the administration of Pres. Theodore Roosevelt. In fact, the two became such bitter enemies that at one point the president barred Tillman from the White House. They put aside their differences long enough, however, to collaborate in securing passage of the Hepburn Act (1906), extending the Interstate Commerce Commission’s regulatory powers over the railroads. Tillman was floor leader for the bill. He generally supported Pres. Woodrow Wilson and, as chairman of the Senate Naval Affairs Committee, promoted the administration’s program to strengthen the U.S. Navy. His vituperative and often profane attacks on his political opponents earned him the nickname “Pitchfork Ben”; he once had a fistfight with his South Carolina colleague on the floor of the Senate.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.