Our 13th President: Millard Fillmore
Fillmore’s Early Years
Born in a log cabin in
Rising in
By the time the Whig Party
nominated him as Vice President in 1848 to run with General Zachary Taylor,
Fillmore’s resume included the New York State Assembly, a failed run for the
governorship, and his years in the National Congress.
Millard Fillmore as President
Fillmore became President
upon the untimely death of Zachary Taylor on July 9, 1850. At the time, he set
a precedent by refusing to deliver an inaugural address. The most pressing
issue before the Congress was the Compromise of 1850 or “Mr. Clay’s
Compromise,” which Fillmore supported but Zachary Taylor opposed. A friend and
admirer of Clay, Fillmore would sign the five separate bills passed by the
Congress that summer through the efforts of Illinois Senator Stephen A.
Douglas.
The 1850 Compromise,
according to Fillmore, represented the “final settlement” regarding territorial
disputes regarding the expansion of slavery. Everyone involved fervently hoped
that the legislation would avert a civil war. Fillmore himself opposed and
hated slavery, but believed that the Constitution protected it.
1850 was also the year that
President Fillmore negotiated the release of Hungarian freedom fighter Louis
Kossuth, who had taken refuge in
During Fillmore’s presidency,
a movement to invade
Fillmore, however, rejected
these efforts and sent federal officials to Southern ports to turn back would
be invaders. Fillmore’s decision was prudent and in keeping with his moderate
Whig views.
Although the Treaty of
Kanagawa “opening
Fillmore’s Attempt to Win a
Second Term
When the Whig Party met in
1852 it took them 53 ballots to finally nominate a presidential candidate,
General Winfield Scott, “old fuss n’ feathers.” Fillmore, Daniel Webster, and
Scott had been the front runners and at one point Fillmore almost clinched the
nomination during negotiations with Webster supporters.
The protracted fight to
nominate Fillmore is a testament to his strength and leadership. Millard
Fillmore should be historically rehabilitated as a President whose achievements
were noteworthy.
Sources:
William A DeGregorio, The Complete Book of
Philip B. Kunhardt, Jr.,
Philip B. Kunhardt III, and Peter W. Kunhardt, The American President (
Stephen B. Oates, The Approaching Fury: Voices of the Storm,
1820-1861 (HarperCollins, 1997).
Page Smith, The Nation Comes of Age: A People’s History
of the Ante-Bellum Years Vol. 4, (McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1981).
First Published March 3, 2009 in Suite101 by M.Streich. copyright
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