Background
Arthur C. Townley was born on December 30, 1880 near Browns Valley, Minn.
He was the son of Fitch R. Townley, a farmer, and Esther J. Cross.
Arthur C. Townley was born on December 30, 1880 near Browns Valley, Minn.
He was the son of Fitch R. Townley, a farmer, and Esther J. Cross.
He graduated from high school in Alexandria, Minn.
He taught in a country school for about two years and then began farming with his brother, Covert, near Beach, N. D. He soon joined others in acquiring land for large-scale wheat farming near Cheyenne Wells, Colo. , but the venture failed.
Townley's return to Beach in 1907 marked the beginning of an extensive flax-raising enterprise that initially proved highly successful. But in 1912, when he was being termed the "flax king of the Northwest, " early frost and a depressed market brought disaster, and Townley was bankrupted.
Embittered, he became an organizer for the Socialist party, at which he proved to be unusually talented. In 1914 he was an unsuccessful candidate for the legislature on the Socialist ticket, and soon therafter left the party to promote his plan for a new type of farmers' political movement. Discontent was rife among upper Midwest farmers, who (with considerable justice) believed themselves exploited by the grain traders and railroads.
Beginning with a lone farm-to-farm canvass, within a few months he had scores of commission-paid organizers throughout the state signing up dues-paying members for his new Nonpartisan League (NPL). In 1916, a little more than a year from the start of organizing efforts, the league succeeded in nominating and electing a governor, all but one other state officer, and a large majority of the lower house of the legislature.
Two years later the NPL swept all state offices and obtained a more than two-thirds majority in both houses of the legislature. The platform was speedily enacted, and soon United States senators and congressmen were also elected. Townley never sought public office under league auspices, but he remained its president and dominating influence, wielding tremendous power.
After 1918 organizing spread to adjoining states, and what had become the National Nonpartisan League soon played a role in the politics of thirteen states; but only in Minnesota, other than the state of its birth, did it become a major force. In Minnesota it was the immediate ancestor of the highly successful Farmer-Labor party. During the six years of league ascendancy, Townley acquired some status as a national political figure, and was widely attacked as a dangerous "leftist" radical. When the league fell from power in 1921-1922, victim of internal dissension, heavily financed opposition, and spurious charges of "pro-Germanism" during World War I, Townley went down with it, although he had lost effective control some months earlier. His ninety-day jail sentence in Minnesota in 1921, on the dubious charge of "conspiring to discourage enlistments, " did not help.
For a time he edited the Farm Holiday News. Townley was repeatedly a candidate for public office in various places and under different party labels, securing moderate support the first two times but thereafter sinking to the status of nuisance candidate: for a North Dakota congressional seat in 1930; for an at-large congressional seat in Minnesota on the Farmer-Labor ticket in 1932; for governor of Minnesota in 1934; for the United States Senate in North Dakota in 1944, 1956, and 1958, first as a Republican and subsequently as an independent.
For a time in the late 1940's he is said to have lived near New Effington, S. D. , with a group concerned with faith healing and speaking in tongues.
In his last years Townley sold insurance. He was traveling about the state, collecting funds to fight the libel suits, when his car crashed into a truck near Makoti, N. D. , and he was killed instantly.
Arthur Charles Townley is remembered as the political organizer best known as the founder the National Non-Partisan League (NPL), a radical farmers' organization which had considerable political success in the states of North Dakota and Minnesota during the second half of the 1910s. Although he died almost unknown, his Nonpartisan League helped shape the politics of an entire region for generations, and its patterns of operation became a guide for many later political movements.
Townley's idea was for an organization that would cut across party lines but would use the relatively new instrument of the direct primary to nominate farmer-endorsed candidates in the major parties, mainly the Republican party in North Dakota. He proposed a simple and direct program: state ownership of terminal elevators, flour mills, packinghouses, and cold storage plants; state inspection and grading of grain; exemption of farm improvements from taxation; state hail insurance; state rural credit banks, operated at cost. Townley proved to be an organizing genius and a remarkably persuasive "stump speaker" whose mastery of sarcasm, scorn, and ridicule, and vitriolic attacks on "Big Biz, " roused enthusiastic responses.
Then he never again found a successful outlet for his abilities. He tried organizing the National Producers Alliance, then promoting unproductive oil well drilling efforts in North Dakota. In the early 1930's he advocated a moratorium on all interest payments and helped to organize the Farm Holiday Association.
During the McCarthy era of the 1950's he found that anticommunism was a marketable commodity, and much of his time was devoted to lecturing on the subject, taking up collections to pay his way. The man once excoriated as a "left-wing radical" now became a "right-wing radical. " He apparently secured financial backing from individuals (and perhaps organizations) fighting the Farmers Union, and his virulent attacks, including claims that the North Dakota Farmers Union was Communist-dominated, led to libel suits against him.
While in Colorado he met, and in 1911 married, Margaret Rose Teenan. They had one foster daughter. Townley's wife died in 1944; their foster daughter, the following year.