Colonel William A. Phillips

Francis Anthony Nixon (December 3, 1878 – September 4, 1956) was an American businessman and the father of U.S. president Richard Nixon.

Early life

Nixon was born in Elk Township, Vinton County, Ohio, the son of Samuel Brady Nixon, who was from Smith Township, Washington County, Pennsylvania, and Sarah Ann (née Wadsworth), a native of Hocking Township, Fairfield County, Ohio.[2] Nixon's family ancestry included colonial Pennsylvania Quakers. He was raised Methodist, however, but converted to Quakerism when he married Hannah Milhous.

Sarah Nixon died in January 1888, leading Francis to live with an uncle during his father's struggle to avoid poverty and to cope with the loss of Sarah.[3] After Francis' father remarried, Francis moved away. Biographer Jonathan Aitken cited Francis' disliking of his new stepmother as his reason for leaving.[4] Nixon proceeded to have multiple jobs during the next fourteen years.[4]

Throughout his youth, Nixon idolized U.S. Presidents Thomas Jefferson and Andrew Jackson.[3] Biographer Stephen E. Ambrose wrote that Nixon ceased favoring the Democratic Party by the age of 17. During the campaign for the 1896 United States presidential election, Nixon had an encounter with presidential candidate William McKinley, who asked him how he was going to vote, Nixon replying, "Republican, of course!" Ambrose cited the encounter as completing Nixon's switch to favoring the Republican Party.[3]

Career

Nixon relocated to California at the end of the century after having been frostbitten working as a motorman in an open streetcar in Columbus, Ohio. After working as a farmhand and oil field roustabout, he attempted to cultivate lemons outside Los Angeles. Francis' son Richard also tested the waters of the citrus business. Shortly after graduating from law school, Richard founded the Citra-Frost Company which attempted to produce and sell frozen orange juice. Richard aimed to follow in his father's footsteps, successfully raising capital from a number of investors for the fledgling enterprise. Richard, a future president of the United States, paid his dues with the company and did much of the grunt work. In addition to his administrative responsibilities as president of the Citra-Frost Company, he was also responsible for cutting and squeezing the oranges to make the juice. This work did not eventually pay off as the company went bankrupt after just 18 months.[5]

After his son Richard was born, Nixon abandoned the lemon grove, and the family relocated to the Quaker community of Whittier, California. Nixon worked the family business, a store that sold groceries and Atlantic Richfield gasoline, but the family remained impoverished. Nixon's life was marked by the deaths of two of his sons, Arthur and Harold, from tuberculosis. He has been described as a "restless, frustrated, and angry man, a mean-spirited person who psychologically abused his five sons and sometimes beat them."[6] However, Richard always spoke well of his parents. He often spoke lovingly of his mother as a "Quaker saint", and began his memoirs with the words "I was born in a house my father built". Writer Jessamyn West, a cousin of the Nixons, was in Frank's Sunday school class for some time. She later described him as "a fiery persuasive teacher", and wrote that Frank Nixon's version of the social gospel made her favor socialism.[6]

By the time of his later adulthood, Nixon often discussed his political opinions with strangers, his son Don remembering his father as being willing to debate anyone he encountered in the family market and having an intolerance of Democrats.[7] Nixon voted for Woodrow Wilson in the 1916 United States presidential election,[8] Warren G. Harding in the 1920 presidential election,[9] Robert Lafollette in the 1924 presidential election, Herbert Hoover in both the 1928 and 1932 presidential elections, and Franklin Roosevelt in the 1936 election. Aitken described these as erratic voting habits that displayed changing political loyalties in the early life of his son Richard.[8]

After his son Arthur's death in 1925, Nixon frequently pondered and was haunted by the possibility of God allowing the death as a form of punishment directed toward him, his actions afterward being never again to open the family store on Sundays and having the family listen to sermons every evening. Nixon favored Robert P. Shuler, Billy Sunday, and Aimee Semple McPherson, taking his sons once a week to hear either Shuler or McPherson at Trinity Methodist Church.[10]

In 1938, Francis' son Richard met Pat Ryan,[11] who Frank reportedly developed a "playful relationship" with and spared the same criticisms he had given his children.[12]

During the controversy concerning Richard's alleged improprieties relating to a fund established by his backers to reimburse him for his political expenses, Frank was "reduced to sobs" in hearing of the story and angered by his son's taking of any funds.[13]

The elder Nixons cared for their granddaughters Julie and Patricia while Vice President Nixon was involved with activities relating to the 1956 Republican National Convention. Francis experienced a ruptured abdominal artery in the latter part of the month from which he was not expected to recover, resulting in the vice president curtailing his public appearances to tend to his father, who advocated that his son return to San Francisco and work with the convention; Vice President Nixon refused.[14] On September 3, Nixon was visited by Richard, who he told upon the latter leaving, "Good night Dick, but I don't think I'll be here in the morning."[15] The next day, Francis Nixon died, his funeral being carried out three days later at the East Whittier Friends Meeting House.[14]

Personal life

On June 25, 1908, he married Hannah Milhous. Together, they had five sons:

Nixon died on September 4, 1956, in La Habra, California, U.S.[1]

In popular culture

He was played by actor Tom Bower in Oliver Stone's movie Nixon.

References

  1. ^ a b "The Nixon Family". Nixon Library and Museum. Archived from the original on October 21, 2013. Retrieved May 31, 2015.
  2. ^ "Genealogy.com: Ancestry of Richard Nixon". Archived from the original on April 16, 2009. Retrieved June 15, 2009.
  3. ^ a b c Ambrose, Stephen E. (1988). Nixon Volume I: The Education of a Politician 1913–1962. Simon & Schuster. pp. 13–20. ISBN 978-0-671-65722-2.
  4. ^ a b Aitken, Jonathan (1993). Nixon: A Life (The Presidents). Regnery History. pp. 2–6. ISBN 978-1-62157-405-7.
  5. ^ Klein, Christopher. "10 Things You May Not Know About Richard Nixon". History. Retrieved March 3, 2021.
  6. ^ a b West, Jessamyn. Double Discovery: A Journey New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1980; p. 125.
  7. ^ Ambrose, pp. 34-36.
  8. ^ a b Aitken, pp. 44-45.
  9. ^ Marquez, Heron (2002). Richard M. Nixon. Lerner Pub Group. p. 16. ISBN 978-0-8225-0098-8.
  10. ^ Aitken, pp. 49-56.
  11. ^ "Pat Nixon, Former First Lady, Dies at 81". The New York Times. July 23, 1993. p. D22. Retrieved November 9, 2007.
  12. ^ Swift, Will (2014). Pat and Dick: The Nixons, An Intimate Portrait of a Marriage. Threshold Editions. p. 26. ISBN 978-1-4516-7695-2.
  13. ^ Black, Conrad (2007). Richard M. Nixon: A Life in Full. PublicAffairs. p. 232. ISBN 978-1-58648-519-1.
  14. ^ a b Ambrose, pp. 407-408.
  15. ^ Aitken, p. 286

External links