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Presidential
Profiles
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This page includes - primarily - profiles of obscure presidents.
ALL presidents made contributions of one kind or another - good, bad, indifferent or medicore.
I hope this page is of interest to MMM readers.
PAGE CONTENTS:
Chester A. Arther
Millard Fillmore
James A. Garfield
Benjamin Harrison
William Henry Harrison
Franklin Pierce
Franklin Roosevelt
Zachary Taylor
John Tyler
Woodrow Wilson
Chester A. Arther
21st President (1881 - 1885)
Dignified, tall, and handsome, with clean-shaven chin and side-whiskers,
Chester A. Arthur "looked like a President."
The son of a Baptist preacher who had emigrated from northern Ireland,
Arthur was born in Fairfield, Vermont, in 1829. He was graduated from Union College in 1848, taught school, was admitted to
the bar, and practiced law in New York City. Early in the Civil War he served as Quartermaster General of the State of New
York.
President Grant in 1871 appointed him Collector of the Port of New York. Arthur effectively marshaled the thousand
Customs House employees under his supervision on behalf of Roscoe Conkling's Stalwart Republican machine.
Public career: Arthur nevertheless was a firm believer in the spoils
system when it was coming under vehement attack from reformers. He insisted upon honest administration of the Customs House,
but staffed it with more employees than it needed, retaining them for their merit as party workers rather than as Government
officials.
In 1878 President Hayes, attempting to reform the Customs House, ousted Arthur. Conkling and his followers
tried to win redress by fighting for the renomination of Grant at the 1880 Republican Convention. Failing, they reluctantly
accepted the nomination of Arthur for the Vice Presidency.
During his brief tenure as Vice President, Arthur stood
firmly beside Conkling in his patronage struggle against President Garfield. But when Arthur succeeded to the Presidency,
he was eager to prove himself above machine politics.
Avoiding old political friends, he became a man of fashion in
his garb and associates, and often was seen with the elite of Washington, New York, and Newport. To the indignation of the
Stalwart Republicans, the onetime Collector of the Port of New York became, as President, a champion of civil service reform.
Public pressure, heightened by the assassination of Garfield, forced an unwieldy Congress to heed the President.
In
1883 Congress passed the Pendleton Act, which established a bipartisan Civil Service Commission, forbade levying political
assessments against officeholders, and provided for a "classified system" that made certain Government positions were obtainable
only through competitive written examinations. The system protected employees against removal for political reasons.
Acting
independently of party dogma, Arthur also tried to lower tariff rates so the Government would not be embarrassed by annual
surpluses of revenue. Congress raised about as many rates as it trimmed, but Arthur signed the Tariff Act of 1883. Aggrieved
Westerners and Southerners looked to the Democratic Party for redress, and the tariff began to emerge as a major political
issue between the two parties.
The Arthur Administration enacted the first general Federal immigration law. Arthur
approved a measure in 1882 excluding paupers, criminals, and lunatics. Congress suspended Chinese immigration for ten years,
later making the restriction permanent.
Arthur demonstrated as President that he was above factions within the Republican
Party, if indeed not above the party itself. Perhaps in part his reason was the well-kept secret he had known since a year
after he succeeded to the Presidency that he was suffering from a fatal kidney disease. He kept himself in the running for
the Presidential nomination in 1884 in order not to appear that he feared defeat, but was not renominated, and died in 1886.
Publisher Alexander K. McClure recalled, "No man ever entered the Presidency so profoundly and widely distrusted, and no one
ever retired ... more generally respected."
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| Millard Fillmore |

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Millard Fillmore
13th President (1850 - 1853)
In his rise from a log cabin to wealth and the White House, Millard Fillmore
demonstrated that through methodical industry and some competence an uninspiring man could make the American dream come true.
Born in the Finger Lakes country of New York in 1800, Fillmore as a youth endured the privations of frontier life.
He worked on his father's farm, and at 15 was apprenticed to a cloth dresser. He attended one-room schools, and fell in love
with the redheaded teacher, Abigail Powers, who later became his wife.
In 1823 he was admitted to the bar; seven years
later he moved his law practice to Buffalo. As an associate of the Whig politician Thurlow Weed, Fillmore held state office
and for eight years was a member of the House of Representatives. In 1848, while Comptroller of New York, he was elected Vice
President.
Fillmore presided over the Senate during the months of nerve-wracking debates over the Compromise of 1850.
He made no public comment on the merits of the compromise proposals, but a few days before President Taylor's death, he intimated
to him that if there should be a tie vote on Henry Clay's bill, he would vote in favor of it.
Thus the sudden accession of Fillmore to the Presidency in July 1850
brought an abrupt political shift in the administration. Taylor's Cabinet resigned and President Fillmore at once appointed
Daniel Webster to be Secretary of State, thus proclaiming his alliance with the moderate Whigs who favored the Compromise.
A bill to admit California still aroused all the violent arguments for and against the extension of slavery, without
any progress toward settling the major issues.
Clay, exhausted, left Washington to recuperate, throwing leadership
upon Senator Stephen A. Douglas of Illinois. At this critical juncture, President Fillmore announced in favor of the Compromise.
On August 6, 1850, he sent a message to Congress recommending that Texas be paid to abandon her claims to part of New Mexico.
This helped influence a critical number of northern Whigs in Congress away from their insistence upon the Wilmot Proviso--the
stipulation that all land gained by the Mexican War must be closed to slavery.
Douglas's effective strategy in Congress
combined with Fillmore's pressure from the White House to give impetus to the Compromise movement. Breaking up Clay's single
legislative package, Douglas presented five separate bills to the Senate:
1. Admit California
as a free state. 2. Settle the Texas boundary and compensate her. 3. Grant
territorial status to New Mexico. 4. Place Federal officers at the disposal of slaveholders
seeking fugitives. 5. Abolish the slave trade in the District of Columbia.
Each measure
obtained a majority, and by September 20, President Fillmore had signed them into law. Webster wrote, "I can now sleep of
nights."
Some of the more militant northern Whigs remained irreconcilable, refusing to forgive Fillmore for having
signed the Fugitive Slave Act. They helped deprive him of the Presidential nomination in 1852.
Within a few years
it was apparent that although the Compromise had been intended to settle the slavery controversy, it served rather as an uneasy
sectional truce.
As the Whig Party disintegrated in the 1850s, Fillmore refused to join the Republican Party; but,
instead, in 1856 accepted the nomination for President of the Know Nothing, or American, Party. Throughout the Civil War he
opposed President Lincoln and during Reconstruction supported President Johnson. He died in 1874.
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| James A. Garfield |

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James
A. Garfield
20th President of the United States (1881)
As the last of the log cabin Presidents, James A. Garfield
attacked political corruption and won back for the Presidency a measure of prestige it had lost during the Reconstruction
period.
He was born in Cuyahoga County, Ohio, in 1831. Fatherless at two, he later drove canal boat teams, somehow
earning enough money for an education. He was graduated from Williams College in Massachusetts in 1856, and he returned to
the Western Reserve Eclectic Institute (later Hiram College) in Ohio as a classics professor. Within a year he was made its
president.
Garfield was elected to the Ohio Senate in 1859 as a Republican. During the secession crisis, he advocated
coercing the seceding states back into the Union.
In 1862, when Union military victories had been few, he successfully
led a brigade at Middle Creek, Kentucky, against Confederate troops. At 31, Garfield became a brigadier general, two years
later a major general of volunteers.
Meanwhile, in 1862, Ohioans elected him to Congress. President
Lincoln persuaded him to resign his commission: It was easier to find major generals than to obtain effective Republicans
for Congress. Garfield repeatedly won re-election for 18 years, and became the leading Republican in the House.
At
the 1880 Republican Convention, Garfield failed to win the Presidential nomination for his friend John Sherman. Finally, on
the 36th ballot, Garfield himself became the "dark horse" nominee.
By a margin of only 10,000 popular votes, Garfield
defeated the Democratic nominee, Gen. Winfield Scott Hancock.
As President, Garfield strengthened Federal authority
over the New York Customs House, stronghold of Senator Roscoe Conkling, who was leader of the Stalwart Republicans and dispenser
of patronage in New York. When Garfield submitted to the Senate a list of appointments including many of Conkling's friends,
he named Conkling's arch-rival William H. Robertson to run the Customs House. Conkling contested the nomination, tried to
persuade the Senate to block it, and appealed to the Republican caucus to compel its withdrawal.
But Garfield would
not submit: "This...will settle the question whether the President is registering clerk of the Senate or the Executive of
the United States.... shall the principal port of entry ... be under the control of the administration or under the local
control of a factional senator."
Conkling maneuvered to have the Senate confirm Garfield's
uncontested nominations and adjourn without acting on Robertson. Garfield countered by withdrawing all nominations except
Robertson's; the Senators would have to confirm him or sacrifice all the appointments of Conkling's friends.
In a
final desperate move, Conkling and his fellow-Senator from New York resigned, confident that their legislature would vindicate
their stand and re-elect them. Instead, the legislature elected two other men; the Senate confirmed Robertson. Garfield's
victory was complete.
In foreign affairs, Garfield's Secretary of State invited all American republics to a conference
to meet in Washington in 1882. But the conference never took place. On July 2, 1881, in a Washington railroad station, an
embittered attorney who had sought a consular post shot the President.
Mortally wounded, Garfield lay in the White
House for weeks. Alexander Graham Bell, inventor of the telephone, tried unsuccessfully to find the bullet with an induction-balance
electrical device which he had designed. On September 6, Garfield was taken to the New Jersey seaside. For a few days he seemed
to be recuperating, but on September 19, 1881, he died from an infection and internal hemorrhage.
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Benjamin Harrison
23rd President (1889-1893)
Nominated for President on the eighth ballot at the 1888 Republican Convention,
Benjamin Harrison conducted one of the first "front-porch" campaigns, delivering short speeches to delegations that visited
him in Indianapolis. As he was only 5 feet, 6 inches tall, Democrats called him "Little Ben"; Republicans replied that he
was big enough to wear the hat of his grandfather, "Old Tippecanoe."
Born in 1833 on a farm by the Ohio River below
Cincinnati, Harrison attended Miami University in Ohio and read law in Cincinnati. He moved to Indianapolis, where he practiced
law and campaigned for the Republican Party. He married Caroline Lavinia Scott in 1853. After the Civil War--he was Colonel
of the 70th Volunteer Infantry--Harrison became a pillar of Indianapolis, enhancing his reputation as a brilliant lawyer.
The Democrats defeated him for Governor of Indiana in 1876 by unfairly stigmatizing him as "Kid Gloves" Harrison.
In the 1880's he served in the United States Senate, where he championed Indians. homesteaders, and Civil War veterans.
In the Presidential election, Harrison received 100,000 fewer popular
votes than Cleveland, but carried the Electoral College 233 to 168. Although Harrison had made no political bargains, his
supporters had given innumerable pledges upon his behalf.
When Boss Matt Quay of Pennsylvania heard that Harrison
ascribed his narrow victory to Providence, Quay exclaimed that Harrison would never know "how close a number of men were
compelled to approach... the penitentiary to make him President."
Harrison was proud of the vigorous foreign policy
which he helped shape. The first Pan American Congress met in Washington in 1889, establishing an information center which
later became the Pan American Union. At the end of his administration Harrison submitted to the Senate a treaty to annex Hawaii;
to his disappointment, President Cleveland later withdrew it.
Substantial appropriation bills were signed by Harrison
for internal improvements, naval expansion, and subsidies for steamship lines. For the first time except in war, Congress
appropriated a billion dollars. When critics attacked "the billion-dollar Congress," Speaker Thomas B. Reed replied, "This
is a billion-dollar country." President Harrison also signed the Sherman Anti-Trust Act "to protect trade and commerce against
unlawful restraints and monopolies," the first Federal act attempting to regulate trusts.
The most perplexing domestic problem Harrison faced was the tariff
issue. The high tariff rates in effect had created a surplus of money in the Treasury. Low-tariff advocates argued that the
surplus was hurting business. Republican leaders in Congress successfully met the challenge. Representative William McKinley
and Senator Nelson W. Aldrich framed a still higher tariff bill; some rates were intentionally prohibitive.
Harrison
tried to make the tariff more acceptable by writing in reciprocity provisions. To cope with the Treasury surplus, the tariff
was removed from imported raw sugar; sugar growers within the United States were given two cents a pound bounty on their production.
Long before the end of the Harrison Administration, the Treasury surplus had evaporated, and prosperity seemed about
to disappear as well. Congressional elections in 1890 went stingingly against the Republicans, and party leaders decided to
abandon President Harrison although he had cooperated with Congress on party legislation. Nevertheless, his party renominated
him in 1892, but he was defeated by Cleveland.
After he left office, Harrison returned to Indianapolis, and married
the widowed Mrs. Mary Dimmick in 1896. A dignified elder statesman, he died in 1901.
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William Henry Harrison
9th President - 1841
Born: February 9, 1773 in Charles City County, Virginia Died:
April 4, 1841. He was the first president to die in office.
"Give him a barrel of hard cider and settle a pension
of two thousand a year on him, and my word for it," a Democratic newspaper foolishly gibed, "he will sit... by the side of
a 'sea coal' fire, and study moral philosophy." The Whigs, seizing on this political misstep, in 1840 presented their
candidate William Henry Harrison as a simple frontier Indian fighter, living in a log cabin and drinking cider, in sharp contrast
to an aristocratic champagne-sipping Van Buren.
Harrison was in fact a scion of the Virginia planter aristocracy.
He was born at Berkeley in 1773. He studied classics and history at Hampden-Sydney College, then began the study of medicine
in Richmond.
Suddenly, that same year, 1791, Harrison switched interests. He obtained a commission as ensign in the
First Infantry of the Regular Army, and headed to the Northwest, where he spent much of his life.
In the campaign
against the Indians, Harrison served as aide-de-camp to General "Mad Anthony" Wayne at the Battle of Fallen Timbers, which
opened most of the Ohio area to settlement. After resigning from the Army in 1798, he became Secretary of the Northwest
Territory, was its first delegate to Congress, and helped obtain legislation dividing the Territory into the Northwest
and Indiana Territories. In 1801 he became Governor of the Indiana Territory, serving 12 years.
His prime task as
governor was to obtain title to Indian lands so settlers could press forward into the wilderness. When the Indians retaliated,
Harrison was responsible for defending the settlements.
The threat against settlers became serious in 1809. An eloquent
and energetic chieftain, Tecumseh, with his religious brother, the Prophet, began to strengthen an Indian confederation to
prevent further encroachment. In 1811 Harrison received permission to attack the confederacy.
While Tecumseh was away
seeking more allies, Harrison led about a thousand men toward the Prophet's town. Suddenly, before dawn on November 7, the
Indians attacked his camp on Tippecanoe River. After heavy fighting, Harrison repulsed them, but suffered 190 dead and
wounded.
The Battle of Tippecanoe, upon which Harrison's fame was to rest, disrupted Tecumseh's confederacy but failed
to diminish Indian raids. By the spring of 1812, they were again terrorizing the frontier.
In the War of 1812 Harrison won more military laurels when he was given
the command of the Army in the Northwest with the rank of brigadier general. At the Battle of the Thames, north of Lake
Erie, on October 5, 1813, he defeated the combined British and Indian forces, and killed Tecumseh. The Indians scattered,
never again to offer serious resistance in what was then called the Northwest.
Thereafter Harrison returned to civilian
life; the Whigs, in need of a national hero, nominated him for President in 1840. He won by a majority of less than 150,000,
but swept the Electoral College, 234 to 60.
When he arrived in Washington in February 1841, Harrison let Daniel Webster
edit his Inaugural Address, ornate with classical allusions. Webster obtained some deletions, boasting in a jolly fashion
that he had killed "seventeen Roman proconsuls as dead as smelts, every one of them."
Webster had reason to be pleased,
for while Harrison was nationalistic in his outlook, he emphasized in his Inaugural that he would be obedient to the will
of the people as expressed through Congress.
But before he had been in office a month, he caught a cold that developed
into pneumonia. On April 4, 1841, he died--the first President to die in office--and with him died the Whig program.
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| Zachary Taylor |

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Franklin Pierce
14th President (1853-1857)
Franklin Pierce became President at a time of apparent tranquility.
The United States, by virtue of the Compromise of 1850, seemed to have weathered its sectional storm. By pursuing the recommendations
of southern advisers, Pierce--a New Englander--hoped to prevent still another outbreak of that storm. But his policies, far
from preserving calm, hastened the disruption of the Union.
Born in Hillsborough, New Hampshire, in 1804, Pierce attended
Bowdoin College. After graduation he studied law, then entered politics. At 24 he was elected to the New Hampshire legislature;
two years later he became its Speaker. During the 1830's he went to Washington, first as a Representative, then as a Senator.
Pierce, after serving in the Mexican War, was proposed by New Hampshire friends for the Presidential nomination in
1852. At the Democratic Convention, the delegates agreed easily enough upon a platform pledging undeviating support of the
Compromise of 1850 and hostility to any efforts to agitate the slavery question. But they balloted 48 times and eliminated
all the well-known candidates before nominating Pierce, a true "dark horse."
Probably because the Democrats stood
more firmly for the Compromise than the Whigs, and because Whig candidate Gen. Winfield Scott was suspect in the South, Pierce
won with a narrow margin of popular votes.
Two months before he took office, he and his wife saw their eleven-year-
old son killed when their train was wrecked. Grief-stricken, Pierce entered the Presidency nervously exhausted.
In
his Inaugural he proclaimed an era of peace and prosperity at home, and vigor in relations with other nations. The United
States might have to acquire additional possessions for the sake of its own security, he pointed out, and would not be
deterred by "any timid forebodings of evil."
Pierce had only to make gestures toward expansion to excite the wrath
of northerners, who accused him of acting as a cat's-paw of Southerners eager to extend slavery into other areas. Therefore
he aroused apprehension when he pressured Great Britain to relinquish its special interests along part of the Central American
coast, and even more when he tried to persuade Spain to sell Cuba.
But the most violent renewal of the storm stemmed
from the Kansas-Nebraska Act, which repealed the Missouri Compromise and reopened the question of slavery in the West. This
measure, the handiwork of Senator Stephen A. Douglas, grew in part out of his desire to promote a railroad from Chicago to
California through Nebraska. Already Secretary of War Jefferson Davis, advocate of a southern transcontinental route,
had persuaded Pierce to send James Gadsden to Mexico to buy land for a southern railroad. He purchased the area now comprising
southern Arizona and part of southern New Mexico for $10,000,000.
Douglas's proposal, to organize western territories
through which a railroad might run, caused extreme trouble. Douglas provided in his bills that the residents of the new territories
could decide the slavery question for them-selves. The result was a rush into Kansas, as southerners and northerners vied
for control of the territory. Shooting broke out, and "bleeding Kansas" became a prelude to the Civil War. By the
end of his administration, Pierce could claim "a peaceful condition of things in Kansas." But, to his disappointment, the
Democrats refused to renominate him, turning to the less controversial Buchanan.
Pierce returned to New Hampshire,
leaving his successor to face the rising fury of the sectional whirlwind. He died in 1869.
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Franklin Roosevelt
32nd President (1933 - 1945)
Franklin Delano Roosevelt was the only four-term president
in U.S. history (and, incidentally, the one who founded Camp David).
When FDR took office as U.S. president in March 1933, the
nation was in shambles. More than 13 million people were without jobs. Hundreds of thousands were sleeping in shanty towns.
Most of the country's banks were closed. The Great Depression had sunk America into despair.
Despite it all, FDR took over confidently and optimistically.
His first countermeasure was to attack the wave of panic threatening to push the nation into further crisis. In his first
inaugural address, he said:
"This is preeminently the time to speak the truth,
the whole truth, frankly and boldly. Nor need we shrink from honestly facing conditions in our country today. This great nation
will endure as it has endured, will revive and will prosper. So, first of all, let me assert my firm belief that the only
thing we have to fear is fear itself--nameless, unreasoning, unjustified terror which paralyzes needed efforts to convert
retreat into advance."
Immediately after his address, Roosevelt instituted a communications
campaign professing hope and calm. Exploiting the new media of his day--radio--he conducted frequent "fireside chats." Nearly
60 million people listened to his first chat in March 1933. He addressed the banking crisis, and strove to balance frank talk
about the grave problems facing the nation with optimism and confidence.
Rallying the nation's hopes was one thing. Fighting the
actual Depression was another. FDR's first move: declaring a "bank holiday" to prevent any more runs on what banks were left
open, and calling a special "100 Days" session of Congress.
In those first 100 days, he pushed through vast amounts
of legislation, providing relief for farms and businesses, bank reform, and industry regulation, as well as cash for the poor,
unemployed, and those in danger of losing their homes. He formed the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation to guarantee the
savings Americans put in banks. And he instituted massive public works programs to provide jobs.
FDR wasn't sure what would work, but he figured that at
least one of his sweeping programs would have some effect. He said, "Take a method and try it. If it fails, admit it frankly,
and try another. But by all means, try something."
By 1935, the nation had made some progress--though not
without staunch opposition to FDR's plans. He responded by enacting a new series of programs, including Social Security, more
taxes on the wealthy, new labor laws, and additional work relief programs. Along the way, he practically invented the welfare
state in America and radically expanded the power of the federal government. Conservatives hated him for it. They called him
"that man in the White House," refusing even to pronounce his name.
By the end of the decade, however, domestic policy began
to look less important than foreign policy, as World War II heated up ominously in Euope and the Pacific. In 1938 and 1939,
industrial production and manufacturing for defense began to lift the country into an economic recovery, and an initially
reluctant Roosevelt realized that Hitler could threaten America as well as Eurpe.
FDR had tried to convince Americans to fight the Depression
as if it were an invading foreign army. Now, they would have to fight an actual foreign army. FDR drummed up support the same
way he had rallied the nation's hopes for the end of the Depression--with direct communication. In 1941, he encouraged Americans
to envision a prosperous, peaceful world founded on "Four Freedoms":
"We look forward to a world founded upon four essential
human freedoms. . . . freedom of speech and expression . . . freedom of every person to worship God in his own way . . . freedom
from want . . . freedom from fear."
After America entered World War II in December 1941, Roosevelt's
focus shifted completely. At a press conference in 1943, he noted that "Dr. New Deal" had been replaced by "Dr. Win the War."
The next year, Americans elected him to an unprecedented fourth term as president. He died in office in 1945 of a cerebral
hemorrhage, before the war's end.
Michael Himick and Shana Drehs
Copyright © 2007, Every Learner, Inc. All rights reserved.
Zachary Taylor
12th President (1849 - 1850)
Northerners and Southerners disputed sharply whether the territories
wrested from Mexico should be opened to slavery, and some Southerners even threatened secession. Standing firm, Zachary Taylor
was prepared to hold the Union together by armed force rather than by compromise.
Born in Virginia in 1784, he was
taken as an infant to Kentucky and raised on a plantation. He was a career officer in the Army, but his talk was most often
of cotton raising. His home was in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and he owned a plantation in Mississippi.
But Taylor did
not defend slavery or southern sectionalism; 40 years in the Army made him a strong nationalist.
He spent a quarter
of a century policing the frontiers against Indians. In the Mexican War he won major victories at Monterrey and Buena Vista.
President Polk, disturbed by General Taylor's informal habits of command
and perhaps his Whiggery as well, kept him in northern Mexico and sent an expedition under Gen. Winfield Scott to capture
Mexico City. Taylor, incensed, thought that "the battle of Buena Vista opened the road to the city of Mexico and the halls
of Montezuma, that others might revel in them."
"Old Rough and Ready's" homespun ways were political assets. His long
military record would appeal to northerners; his ownership of 100 slaves would lure southern votes. He had not committed himself
on troublesome issues. The Whigs nominated him to run against the Democratic candidate, Lewis Cass, who favored letting the
residents of territories decide for themselves whether they wanted slavery.
In protest against Taylor the slaveholder
and Cass the advocate of "squatter sovereignty," northerners who opposed extension of slavery into territories formed a Free
Soil Party and nominated Martin Van Buren. In a close election, the Free Soilers pulled enough votes away from Cass to elect
Taylor.
Although Taylor had subscribed to Whig principles of legislative leadership, he was not inclined to be a puppet
of Whig leaders in Congress. He acted at times as though he were above parties and politics. As disheveled as always, Taylor
tried to run his administration in the same rule-of-thumb fashion with which he had fought Indians.
Traditionally,
people could decide whether they wanted slavery when they drew up new state constitutions. Therefore, to end the dispute over
slavery in new areas, Taylor urged settlers in New Mexico and California to draft constitutions and apply for statehood, bypassing
the territorial stage.
Southerners were furious, since neither state constitution was likely to permit slavery; Members
of Congress were dismayed, since they felt the President was usurping their policy-making prerogatives. In addition, Taylor's
solution ignored several acute side issues: the northern dislike of the slave market operating in the District of Columbia;
and the southern demands for a more stringent fugitive slave law.
In February 1850 President Taylor had held a stormy
conference with southern leaders who threatened secession. He told them that if necessary to enforce the laws, he personally
would lead the Army. Persons "taken in rebellion against the Union, he would hang ... with less reluctance than he had hanged
deserters and spies in Mexico." He never wavered.
Then events took an unexpected turn. After participating in ceremonies
at the Washington Monument on a blistering July 4, Taylor fell ill; within five days he was dead. After his death, the forces
of compromise triumphed, but the war Taylor had been willing to face came 11 years later. In it, his only son Richard served
as a general in the Confederate Army.
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| John Tyler |

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John Tyler
10th President (1841 - 1845)
Dubbed "His Accidency" by his detractors, John Tyler was the first Vice
President to be elevated to the office of President by the death of his predecessor.
Born in Virginia in 1790, he
was raised believing that the Constitution must be strictly construed. He never wavered from this conviction. He attended
the College of William and Mary and studied law.
Serving in the House of Representatives from 1816 to 1821, Tyler
voted against most nationalist legislation and opposed the Missouri Compromise. After leaving the House he served twice as
Governor of Virginia. As a Senator he reluctantly supported Jackson for President as a choice of evils. Tyler soon joined
the states' rights Southerners in Congress who banded with Henry Clay, Daniel Webster, and their newly formed Whig party opposing
President Jackson.
The Whigs nominated Tyler for Vice President in 1840, hoping for support
from southern tates'-righters who could not stomach Jacksonian Democracy. The slogan "Tippecanoe and Tyler Too" implied flagwaving
nationalism plus a dash of southern sectionalism.
Clay, intending to keep party leadership in his own hands, minimized
his nationalist views temporarily; Webster proclaimed himself "a Jeffersonian Democrat." But after the election, both men
tried to dominate "Old Tippecanoe."
Suddenly President Harrison was dead, and "Tyler too" was in the White House.
At first the Whigs were not too disturbed, although Tyler insisted upon assuming the full powers of a duly elected President.
He even delivered an Inaugural Address, but it seemed full of good Whig doctrine. Whigs, optimistic that Tyler would accept
their program, soon were disillusioned.
Tyler was ready to compromise on the banking question, but Clay would not
budge. He would not accept Tyler's "exchequer system," and Tyler vetoed Clay's bill to establish a National Bank with branches
in several states. A similar bank bill was passed by Congress. But again, on states' rights grounds, Tyler vetoed it.
In retaliation, the Whigs expelled Tyler from their party.
All the Cabinet resigned but Secretary of State Webster. A year later when Tyler vetoed a tariff bill, the first impeachment
resolution against a President was introduced in the House of Representatives. A committee headed by Representative John Quincy
Adams reported that the President had misused the veto power, but the resolution failed.
Despite their differences,
President Tyler and the Whig Congress enacted much positive legislation. The "Log-Cabin" bill enabled a settler to claim 160
acres of land before it was offered publicly for sale, and later pay $1.25 an acre for it.
In 1842 Tyler did sign
a tariff bill protecting northern manufacturers. The Webster-Ashburton treaty ended a Canadian boundary dispute; in 1845 Texas
was annexed.
The administration of this states'-righter strengthened the Presidency. But it also increased sectional
cleavage that led toward civil war. By the end of his term, Tyler had replaced the original Whig Cabinet with southern conservatives.
In 1844 Calhoun became Secretary of State. Later these men returned to the Democratic Party, committed to the preservation
of states' rights, planter interests, and the institution of slavery. Whigs became more representative of northern business
and farming interests.
When the first southern states seceded in 1861, Tyler led a compromise movement; failing, he
worked to create the Southern Confederacy. He died in 1862, a member of the Confederate House of Representatives.
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Woodrow Wilson
28th President (1913 - 1921)
When asked about President Woodrow Wilson, the answer usually is that
he led the country quite reluctantly, into World War One, and that he was the former President of Princeton University. He
is thought of as an idealist who after "the Great War" led a courageous attempt to get the U.S. Senate to ratify his vision
for a "League of Nations."
The rejection of Wilson's polices in the 1920 election is reflected as
a reaction to Wilson's idealism. We were tired of the reforms of the so-called progressive era and the electorate longed for
a return to a simpler time. What is left out is that it was also a reaction against Wilson's racism, reactionary domestic
activities, foreign intervention and lies.
Under President Wilson the United States intervened in Latin America
more than at any other time in its history. In fact,after Wilson's term the U.S. sought better relations with Mexico under
the guise of a good neighbor policy. During his term we landed troops in Cuba, Haiti, Panama, the Dominican Republic and ten
times in Mexico. Both sides condemned
Wilson's intervention in Mexico in the Mexican Revolution. Wilson may
have said that he believed in self-etermination but his actions tell another story.
In Haiti, U.S. marines invaded and forced the legislature to install
our candidate as President. Later when the Haitians refused to declare war on Germany, we got ride of the Haitian legislature.
It is not that Wilson failed to bring democracy to Haiti. The problem was that he never tried.
On the domestic front, we have Wilson to thank for creating segregation
within the Federal government. When Congress refused to pass his racist legislation, Wilson went ahead and refused to appoint
blacks to federal offices; even the jobs that had historically gone to African-Americans. He used his power to segregate the
Federal government and when blacks in the government protested, he had them fired.
In 1914, D.W. Griffith made his ode to the Ku Klux Klan, "Birth of a
Nation." It was screened at the White House afterwards Wilson said, "It was like writing history with lightning."
Woodrow Wilson campaigned as a peace candidate in the 1916 elections,
and by 1917 we were at war. During the war,President Wilson attacked all those who opposed him. He passed into law the Espionage
Act in 1917 and the Sedition
Act of 1918. This gave Wilson the mandate to arrest anyone who spoke
out against the war. It went to absurd lengths.
Once a filmmaker was arrested for making a film about the American Revolution.
In it, the British were accurately portrayed as the enemy, but this logic did not faze Wilson's justice department who said
that it was anti-British and therefore in violation of the Sedition Act. The court upheld the decision.
Wilson's government refused to mail publications that were critical of
his policies, he jailed suffragettes when they asked for the vote, and his justice department broke into the homes of citizens
across the country. By the 1920s many were tired of Wilson and he was hated in his time so why do we revere him now? Beats
me.
Unknown author and/or copyright. Used without permission,
but with the best of intentions.
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