Emperor List of Authors
Chester Alan ArthurWilhelm IFriedrich IIIFrancois Paul Jules Grévy
Sir John Alexander MacdonaldRutherford B. HayesPatrice MacMahonSir John Joseph Caldwell Abbott
Marie François Sadi CarnotAlexander III AlexandrovichSir John Sparrow David ThompsonFrancois Félix Faure
Queen VictoriaBenjamin HarrisonWilliam McKinleyJean Paul Pierre Casimir-Périer
Guang XuStephen Grover ClevelandStephen Grover ClevelandEdward VII
Sir Charles TupperYuan ShikaiSir Mackenzie Bowell
Nicholas IIFeng GuozhangTheodore RooseveltSir Wilfrid Laurier
Paul DeschanelZhou ZijiWarren Gamaliel HardingThomas Woodrow Wilson
Vladimir Ilich LeninSun ZhongshanFriedrich EbertTaisho Emperor
Li YuanhongZhang ZuolinÉmile François LoubetTan Yankai
William Howard TaftClement Armand FallièresPaul DoumerHu Weide
Cen ChunxuanJohn Calvin Coolidge,Jr.Raymond PoincaréPaul von Hindenburg
Huang FuDuan QiruiHu HanminGeorge V
Gaston DoumergueSir Robert Laird BordenCao KunRyikov,Leksei Ivanovich
Xu ShichangWilhelm IILin SenAlexandre Millerand
Chester Alan Arthur
Emperor  (October 5, 1829 ADNovember 18, 1886 AD)
StartEnd
Reign1881 AD1885 AD

  Chester Alan Arthur (October 5, 1829 – November 18, 1886) was an American politician who served as the 21st President of the United States. Arthur was a member of the Republican Party and worked as a lawyer before becoming the 20th Vice President under James Garfield. While Garfield was mortally wounded by Charles J. Guiteau on July 2, 1881, he did not die until September 19, at which time Arthur was sworn in as president, serving until March 4, 1885.
  
  Before entering elected politics, Arthur was a member of the Stalwart faction of the Republican Party and a political protégé of Roscoe Conkling, rising to Collector of the Port of New York, a position to which he was appointed by President Ulysses S. Grant. He was then removed by the succeeding president, Rutherford B. Hayes, in an effort to reform the patronage system in New York.
  
  To the chagrin of the Stalwarts, the onetime Collector of the Port of New York became, as President, a champion of civil service reform. He avoided old political cronies and eventually alienated his old mentor Conkling. Public pressure, heightened by the assassination of Garfield, forced an unwieldy Congress to heed the President. Arthur's primary achievement was the passage of the Pendleton Civil Service Reform Act. The passage of this legislation earned Arthur the moniker "The Father of Civil Service" and a favorable reputation among historians.
  
  Publisher Alexander K. McClure wrote, "No man ever entered the Presidency so profoundly and widely distrusted, and no one ever retired… more generally respected." Author Mark Twain, deeply cynical about politicians, conceded, "It would be hard indeed to better President Arthur's administration."
    

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