Political Parties in the 1850s: Rise of the Republican Party
At the end of President
Andrew Jackson’s first term in office there were two political parties, the
National Republican and the Democrats. The Whigs, formed in opposition to
Political Changes Began in
1848
Unable to capture the
Democratic Party nomination in 1848 because of the prevailing two-thirds rule,
Martin Van Buren left the convention to lead the newly formed Free Soil Party. The
two-thirds rule stipulated that party candidates had to achieve a two-thirds
majority of the delegate count. Van Buren did not have crucial Southern
support.
The Free Soil Party was
supported by former Liberty Party members. In 1844, Liberty Party candidate
James Birney helped deny Henry Clay victory. An abolitionist-oriented third
party, it opposed
Immigration and the
Know-Nothing Party
The Whig Party dissolved as a
national force following their failed attempt in 1852 to elect General Winfield
Scott. Out of the ashes of the Whig Party, several new parties emerged.
Although the Free Soil Party was still active in 1854, the so-called
“Know-Nothing” Party had reemerged, targeting the large numbers of immigrants
entering the
In the 1854 mid-term
election, the American Party sent 62 members to the House of Representatives,
just two more than the waning Whig Party. The newly formed Republican Party
sent 46 representatives. By the 1858 mid-term election, the Whigs survived only
in parts of New England, eastern
The Democrats and the
Kansas-Nebraska Act
Stephen Douglas’
Kansas-Nebraska Act was pivotal in splitting the Democratic Party.
Anti-Nebraska Democrats gravitated to the American Party and then the
Republicans. Nebraska Democrats would divide in 1860 into Breckinridge
Democrats and Douglas Democrats. The Kansas-Nebraska Act also had the effect of
uniting disparate Northern constituencies under the Republican banner.
By 1860 the efforts to unify
Northern parties under the Republican platform were complete. Republicans drew
strength from former Free Soilers, Northern Whigs, the now defunct American
Party, and Anti-Nebraska Democrats. Democrats split at their 1860 Charleston
Convention, resulting in two separate candidates: John C. Breckinridge whose
faction favored secession, and
The fourth party, led by John
Bell, called itself the Constitutional Union Party, deriving its support from
Southern pro-union Whigs and Southern Know-Nothings. Ironically, the
Kansas-Nebraska Act had been a major catalyst in these political changes, yet
by 1860 there were only two slaves in all of
Parties and Issues in the
1850s
The on-going issue of
expanding slavery was a chief cause of political realignments in the decade
preceding the Civil War. It was the issue that ultimately led
References:
Don E. Fehrenbacher, The Slaveholding Republic: An Account of the
United States Government’s Relations to Slavery (Oxford University Press,
2001)
Eric Foner, Free Soil, Free Labor, Free Men: The
Ideology of the Republican Party Before the Civil War (Oxford University
Press, 1995)
Michael F. Holt, The Rise and Fall of the American Whig
Party: Jacksonian Politics and the Onset of the Civil War (Oxford University
Press, 1999)
Alexander Keyssar, The Right to Vote: The Contested History of
Democracy in the
Frederick Merk, History of the Westward Movement (Alfred
A. Knopf, 1978)
First published April 11, 2010 in Suite101 by M.Streich. copyright
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