Cleveland - It was a brokered convention with three candidates and two factions. Republican Party leaders hoped for unity, but once the delegates began voting, consensus proved elusive.

Welcome to the presidential nominating convention of 1880. After round upon round of votes, the delegates finally nominated a dark horse from Ohio on the 36th ballot. The candidate nobody saw coming was James A. Garfield, a congressman and Civil War veteran. He went on to win the presidential election.

Garfield was shot by an assassin four months after taking office, and without a legacy, his story has faded. But history geeks and maybe even some of the Republicans heading to the convention in Cleveland this summer may find Garfield’s story — and the jockeying that led to his nomination — of interest.

“This is a guy who became a presidential candidate unexpectedly,” said Todd Arrington, site manager at James A. Garfield National Historic Site in Mentor, Ohio. “With the Republicans coming to Cleveland, we hope they’ll come 25 minutes down the road to Mentor to learn about him.”... Read More: VIN