Roscoe Conkling (born Oct. 30, 1829, Albany, N.Y., U.S.—died April 18, 1888, New York City) was a prominent U.S. Republican leader in the post-Civil War period. He was known for his support of severe Reconstruction measures toward the South and his insistence on the control of political patronage in his home state of New York.
Admitted to the bar in 1850, Conkling soon established a reputation as a lawyer, orator, and Whig Party leader. In 1858 he ran as a Republican and was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives, serving for six years. In 1867 he won a seat in the Senate, where he held office for 14 years.
In Congress, Conkling consistently upheld the administration of President Abraham Lincoln in his conduct of the Civil War (1861–65). He became a leader of the Radical Republicans, who advocated firm military supervision of the defeated Confederate states and broader rights for freedmen. In addition, he was an avid supporter of the Fourteenth (due process) Amendment to the Constitution (1868). Conkling influenced the administration of President Ulysses S. Grant (1869–77) in its overall policy toward the South.
To maintain a tight grip on the reins of political power in his home state, Conkling insisted on the need for senators to have personal control over all federal appointments within state boundaries. He thus vigorously resisted the efforts of the Republican president Rutherford B. Hayes (served 1877–81) to introduce civil-service reform legislation.
At the party convention of 1880 Conkling headed the so-called Stalwart faction supporting a third term for former president Grant. As a result of this movement, the convention was split and a compromise candidate, James A. Garfield, was nominated and elected. Conkling resigned from office (May 1881) in a dispute with the new president over the patronage issue. He declined a nomination to the U.S. Supreme Court in 1882 and practiced law in New York City until his death.