The Charleston Democratic Convention in 1860:
The Democratic Party
Convention in Charleston, South Carolina in the spring of 1860
foreshadowed the demise of the only national political party to potentially
field a presidential candidate in the fall. Illinois Senator Stephen Douglas
realized this when he wrote on June 20th, “there is eminent danger
that the Democratic party will be demoralized if not destroyed by the breaking
up of the Convention.” Douglas had hoped to
receive the nomination, but his supporters were thwarted by Southern fire
eaters like William Yancey and even the sitting president, James Buchanan.
The Choice of Charleston for the
National Convention
Every historian writing about
the events of 1860 concur that Charleston
was a poor choice for the Democratic Convention. Northern Democrats hoped to
move the convention site to Baltimore,
a more neutral location, but Southerners rejected this. South Carolina had long been in the
forefront as a champion of Southern causes; the South’s greatest apologist,
John C. Calhoun, had represented the state for decades.
It would be in Charleston where the first shots of the Civil War were
fired on Ft. Sumter. In the spring of 1860, Charleston memories vividly recalled the late 1859 raid at
Harpers Ferry and many Southerners believed
John Brown had received help from Northern Republicans. The Charleston Mercury churned out daily
propaganda, reminding its readers that the South was rapidly becoming a
minority entity in the expanding United States.
Stephen Douglas Clings to
Popular Sovereignty
Although Douglas remained in Washington, recovering
from serious illness, he was, according to Damon Wells, “…the only Democrat in
1860 who could unite his party and lead it to victory…” But Douglas
advocated popular sovereignty in regard to the expansion of slavery in the
western territories acquired in 1848. Seeking to circumvent the 1857 Dred Scott
decision, Douglas formulated his Freeport
Doctrine which still allowed citizens in a territory to decide the slavery
issue.
Southerners would have none
of it and Deep South delegates vowed to walk
out of the convention if popular sovereignty was adopted instead of a plank in
the party platform calling for a congressional slave code. Addressing the
convention on the final day, Alabama’s
extremist William Yancey exhorted his listeners that the North must protect the
rights of the South and that failure to do so would lead to secession. The
Committee on Resolutions, controlled by Southern extremists, declared in a
resolution that it was “the duty of the federal government…to protect, when
necessary, the rights of persons and property in the territories.” Slaves in
the South were property.
The Role of James Buchanan
Douglas and Buchanan had
clashed early in the Pennsylvanian’s presidency and the vengeful Buchanan had
retaliated by withholding patronage. The 1860 convention contained numerous
Buchananite delegations with instructions to stop any nomination of Douglas. According to scholar Damon Wells, Buchanan had
promoted Charleston as the convention city,
knowing that Douglas could never receive the
party’s nod in this Southern capital.
The End of the Convention and
the End of the Party
After the convention rejected
the extremist resolutions, Yancey bolted the hall, followed by delegations from
other Deep South states. But the two-thirds
rule regarding nomination was still in place and was interpreted to include all seated delegates, including those
that had bolted. This meant that Stephen Douglas would never achieve
nomination.
The two-thirds rule was
supported, ironically, by Border State delegates as well as those from New York. Historians
explain New York’s
stance on the basis of commerce with the South: disunion would hurt such trade
and harm Northern manufactures. After fifty-seven ballots, the convention was
deadlocked and adjourned.
Effects of the Charleston Convention
The Democratic Party split
into three factions, causing party defeat in the Election of 1860. Although
Stephen Douglas represented the Northern Democrats, he received the lowest
number of electoral votes, yet it was Douglas who most vocally preached the
message of federal “non intervention” by Congress “with slavery in the
territories” (letter to William A. Richardson, June 20th, 1860). The
Charleston Convention may not have nominated Douglas, but it paved the way for
a Lincoln
victory.
References:
The Letters of Stephen Douglas, edited by Robert W. Johannsen (University of
Illinois Press, 1961)
Eric H. Walter, The Fire-Eaters (Louisiana State
University Press, 1992)
Damon Wells, Stephen Douglas: The Last Years, 1857-1861 (University
of Texas Press, 1971)
Published first in Suite101 March 26, 2010 by M.Streich. copyright
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