Millard Fillmore.
Publié le 10/05/2013
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B Vice President of the United States
During the first half of 1850, Fillmore as vice president presided over the United States Senate (the upper chamber of Congress) as angry debates raged betweenNorthern and Southern sectionalists over the status of slavery in the recently acquired lands.
His fairness and sense of humor in the chair were not enough to restorepeace among the contending senators.
The antislavery faction, led by Senator Seward (the former governor of New York) and Senator Salmon P.
Chase of Ohio, clashedwith the Southerners, led by Senator James M.
Mason of Virginia, Senator Jefferson Davis of Mississippi, and Senator John C.
Calhoun of South Carolina.
Angry wordsfiguratively rocked the Senate hall, as they did the chamber of the House of Representatives.
Although President Taylor was a Louisiana slaveholder, he leaned more toward Seward's antislavery views.
Determined to uphold the Constitution of the United States,the president threatened to send federal troops to protect disputed New Mexico territory from an invasion by proslavery Texans.
Southerners countered that, if Taylorfollowed through with his threat, the act would be the signal for an armed Southern rebellion against federal power.
Mississippi called for a convention to meet in June1850 at Nashville, Tennessee, to consider secession.
B1 The Compromise of 1850
The best hope of compromise seemed to lie in a series of resolutions drawn up by Senator Henry Clay of Kentucky and based on measures proposed by representativesfrom both parties and both sections.
These resolutions were referred to a select committee of 13, headed by Clay.
The committee recommended an omnibus bill, basedon Clay's resolutions.
According to the recommended compromise, California was to be admitted as a free state, while the Utah and New Mexico territories were to beorganized without mentioning slavery.
This meant the territories were open to all settlers, including slaveholders.
The bill also included a new, tougher Fugitive SlaveLaw, which required that runaway slaves be returned to their owners.
The new law had severe penalties for nonenforcement.
A chief grievance of Southerners againstthe old law was that Northerners would not enforce it.
Other sections of the bill abolished slavery in the District of Columbia and settled a boundary dispute betweenTexas and New Mexico.
President Taylor did not share the fear, held by Clay, Fillmore, and others who favored compromise, that the Union was threatened.
He insisted on the admission ofCalifornia as a free state, and he encouraged New Mexico to adopt a free status.
Taylor's opposition hindered those who favored the compromise.
However, he diedsuddenly on July 9, 1850, and Fillmore took the oath as president.
IV PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES
President Fillmore's choice of a Cabinet showed unmistakably that, as a moderate Whig and a foe of sectionalism, he favored compromise to avoid a national crisis.
Ashis secretary of state, Fillmore appointed Senator Daniel Webster of Massachusetts, who had appealed for compromise in a celebrated speech on March 7, 1850.Another significant Cabinet appointment was Governor John J.
Crittenden of Kentucky, also a well-known conciliatory Whig, as attorney general.
Fillmore made plain his desire for peace in a message to Congress on August 6, 1850.
It was hailed by influential congressional leaders as a masterstroke of timing andpersuasive moderation.
Aided by the full power and support of Fillmore's administration, Clay's omnibus bill, known as the Compromise of 1850, was split into fiveseparate measures, all of which were passed by Congress and signed into law by Fillmore.
Meanwhile, the Nashville convention adjourned without taking any actionagainst the Union.
One of the five measures was the new Fugitive Slave Law.
Fillmore signed and, more important, enforced the Fugitive Slave Law, actions that were completely inkeeping with his conciliatory policy.
As a result, he won the hatred of the more radical antislavery group.
Seward and Weed, the antislavery Whig leaders of New York,opposed Fillmore vehemently, and the president countered by removing pro-Seward people from federal office.
At a Whig convention in Syracuse, New York, resolutionswere passed approving Seward's radical position.
Thereupon a contingent of Fillmore conservatives walked out, led by Francis Granger, whose gray hair gave the name“Silver Gray Whigs” to that faction.
This act widened the breach in the Whig Party, which was also disintegrating in other parts of the country on the issue of slavery.
A Foreign Affairs
The most important aspect of Fillmore's foreign policy was his sanction of a plan to open Japan to world commerce, which had been largely prohibited there for morethan 200 years.
Influenced by petitions to Congress and other evidences of public interest, he approved an expedition to open the “sealed” empire.
In January 1852 anaval expedition was entrusted to Commodore Matthew C.
Perry.
In July 1853, four months after Fillmore left the presidency, Perry arrived in Japan with four men-of-war.
That visit and another visit the following year culminated in a commercial treaty between the United States and Japan.
B Election of 1852
Fillmore was reluctant to serve a second term, but participated in the Whig national convention of 1852 because he wanted to ensure that the party platform supportedthe Compromise of 1850.
After securing that, he asked that his name be withdrawn at an opportune moment and his delegates transferred to Daniel Webster, anothercontender for the Whig presidential nomination.
However, Fillmore's Southern Whig supporters, who believed he would win, backed him vigorously and never didwithdraw his name.
They held out for Webster to release his delegates.
By the time Webster did that, it was too late.
The antislavery Whigs had secured control of theconvention and, mindful of Fillmore's enforcement of the Fugitive Slave Law, they succeeded in having General Winfield Scott named the party's candidate.
InNovember, Scott was decisively defeated by his Democratic opponent, Franklin Pierce.
After the 1852 election the Whig Party broke up over the slavery issue.
By 1856its place had been taken by the Republican Party, led by Seward and Weed.
C Later Life
Fillmore turned over the presidential office to Pierce in March 1853.
His wife died less than a month later, and the former president returned to his home in Buffalo.
In 1856, Fillmore accepted the presidential nomination of the American Party, a coalition of Silver Gray Whigs and Know-Nothings, a secretive political group opposed toimmigration.
In the 1856 national election, contested by the Democrat James Buchanan, the Republican John C.
Frémont, and the American Fillmore, Buchanantriumphed by a small margin.
Fillmore carried only the eight electoral votes of Maryland, a border slave state.
The popular vote was 1,838,169 for Buchanan, 1,341,264for Frémont, and 874,534 for Fillmore.
Fillmore returned permanently to private life, but he continued to regard the political scene with interest and anxiety.
Critical events—the election of Abraham Lincoln in1860 and the secession of the Southern states in 1860 and 1861 that led to the outbreak of the Civil War—induced Fillmore to take the platform to plead againstsecession and disunion.
Always for conciliation rather than coercion, Fillmore opposed some of President Lincoln's measures.
In 1864, when Lincoln ran for reelection,Fillmore supported General George B.
McClellan, the Democratic candidate and a conservative.
After the war, Fillmore's sympathies were with President Andrew Johnsonin opposition to the Radical Republicans in Congress, who inflicted their drastic, punitive Reconstruction policy on the defeated secessionist states..
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