The American Presidential Election of 1852
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The 17th episode in a very long series about the
American presidential elections from 1788 to the present. I hope to have them done by
Election Day 2016. The 1852 election is eerily similar to the
1844 election.
What is with everyone dying in office so much, anyway?
Feeling extra dorky? Then visit here:
http://www.countingthevotes.com/1852
You might call this election the election of 1844, part 2, because it was very similar to it. Just like in 1844, a young dark horse candidate won. Also like in 1844, the incumbent president was a
Whig who had become
President after the death of his war-hero predecessor. And that Whig didn’t get his party’s nomination for the next election.
In 1852, the Whig was
Millard Fillmore, who took over after
Zachary Taylor died in 1850. The biggest national issue during
Taylor and
Fillmore’s presidencies was the expansion of slavery out in western territories.
The Compromise of 1850 had helped ease tensions a bit, but it really just kicked the can down the road- the country was becoming further divided between Northerners and
Southerners over slavery.
You know who else was divided?
The Whig Party. They had a hard time deciding who their nominee for the 1852 election would be. Many favored Fillmore, but many others favored
Mexican American War hero
Winfield Scott,
Old Fuss and Feathers himself. Even others favored
Secretary of State Daniel Webster. In the end, it was Old Fuss and Feathers, Winfield Scott, who would get the nomination.
William Alexander Graham, the
Secretary of the Navy and former governor and senator from
North Carolina, was his running mate.
The Democratic Party had at least nine candidates who were all fighting to get nominated. At their convention, four major candidates stood out.
Lewis Cass, who won the nomination in
1848,
James Buchanan, the former Secretary of State and
Senator from
Pennsylvania,
Stephen Douglas, a senator from
Illinois, and
William L. Marcy, the former
Secretary of War. Then, seemingly out of nowhere, comes another dark horse candidate for the Democrats-
Franklin Pierce, a 48 year-old former Senator and
Representative from
New Hampshire. They ended up nominating Pierce, with
William R. King, a former Senator and Representative from
Alabama, as his running mate.
Third parties? Oh there were plenty.
The biggest was the
Free Soil Party, which had a strong showing in 1848. They nominated
John P. Hale, another Senator from New Hampshire, with
George Washington Julian as his running mate, a
U.S. Representative from
Indiana who was later a
Radical Republican before it was cool.
The Union Party formed after many
Whigs were upset with Winfield Scott’s nomination. They nominated Daniel Webster for President.
Then there was the
Native American Party, no not that
Native American, that Native American Party. They were also called the
Know-Nothing Party by opponents thought they, well, knew nothing. Surprisingly, the party embraced the nickname because I guess they liked being called stupid. They also nominated Daniel Webster, even though he didn’t approve.
And there was the
Southern Rights Party, an offshoot of the
Democratic Party that nominated
George Troup, a former Senator, Representative, and
Governor of Georgia.
This was the first election in which citizens of the new state of
California could vote. The two biggest political parties- the Whigs and the
Democrats, had similar platforms, so the campaigns were mostly just about the personalities of Pierce and
Scott. This jaded a lot of voters and explains why so many third parties popped up. The lack of clear-cut issues caused the voter turnout to decline.