The American Presidential Election of 1856
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The
18th 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. In 1856, the birth of the
Republican Party, and a three-way race that demonstrated the country's growing sectionalism.
Feeling extra dorky? Then visit here:
http://www.countingthevotes.com/1856
The 18th
Presidential election in
American history took place on
November 4th, 1856.
Franklin Pierce had a rough going over the previous four years, and now struggled to get his own party’s renomination. At the
Democratic Party’s convention, 4 main candidates were in the running: Pierce,
James Buchanan,
Little Giant himself
Stephen Douglas, and the beautiful
Lewis Cass. It was a tight race between four well established and qualified candidates
. In the end,
Buchanan won the nomination. His running mate was
John C. Breckinridge, a former
U.S. Representative from
Kentucky.
By this time, the
Whig Party had mostly collapsed. Most former
Whigs had joined the either the
Know Nothing Party or a brand new political party called the Republican Party.
The Republican Party was formed in 1854 to oppose the extremely controversial
Kansas Nebraska Act. At the first
Republican National Convention in June of 1856, they met to approve an anti-slavery platform, an end to polygamy in Mormon settlements, and federal aid for a transcontinental railroad. Their nominee for
President was
John C. Fremont, a former
Senator from
California, although
Supreme Court justice John McClean from
Ohio was in the running.
Fremont’s running mate was
William L. Dayton, a former Senator from
New Jersey.
The American Party, formerly the
Native American Party and nicknamed the “Know Nothing Party,” by this time had gained much support for their nativist platform.
Nativism is the policy of protecting the interests native citizens against foreigners, and the
American Party mostly targeted
Irish Catholics, who they complained were hurting the country.
Even though former President
Millard Fillmore was not a member of the American Party, nor was he a nativist, and he never attended an American Party
function, the party nominated him to be President again. He was actually out of the country at the time of the nomination, and had not been consulted beforehand. Still, he just sort of went with it. The Know-Nothings nominated
Andrew Jackson Donelson, the nephew of
Andrew Jackson.
There were two other political parties that ran candidates for President, the deceptively named
North American party and the North American
Seceders Party, but they were pretty insignificant so we won’t go into who they endorsed.
Slavery was the inescapable issue of the day, and it would be quite an understatement to say the country was divided on the issue. The Republican Party unapologetically opposed expanding slavery out west.
It’s slogan was “
Free speech, free press, free soil, free men, Fremont, and victory!”
The Democrats warned that a Fremont victory would bring a civil war.
The American Party attacked Fremont also, call him a….gasp
...a
Catholic, even though it wasn’t true.
The fact is, despite their xenophobia, the American Party attracted many who were scared at how divided the country had become. Their candidate,
Fillmore, promised a return to unity.