Sunday, December 1, 2019
Millard Fillmore Essays - Millard Fillmore, Second Party System
  Millard Fillmore    Millard Fillmore    Fillmore, Millard (1800-1874), 13th president  of the United States (1850-1853) and the second vice president to finish  the term of a deceased president. He succeeded Zachary Taylor at a critical  moment in United States history. The Mexican War (1846-1848) had renewed  the conflict between the Northern and Southern states over slavery, since  it had added new territories to the United States. The debate over whether  these territories should be admitted as free or slave states precipitated  a crisis that threatened civil war. Much to the relief of Northern and    Southern politicians, Fillmore pursued a moderate and conciliatory policy.    He signed into law the Compromise of 1850, which admitted one territory  as a free state and allowed slave owners to settle in the others. This  compromise did not solve the basic problem of slavery but did preserve  peace for nearly eleven years. During that time the North gained the industrial  power that enabled it to defeat the South when civil war eventually came.    Fillmore was born in upstate New York in    1800. He was the second child and eldest son in a family of nine. His parents,    Nathaniel and Phoebe Millard Fillmore, had moved from Vermont to New York  several years before his birth. Young Fillmore did chores on his father's  farm, worked as an apprentice in the clothier's trade, and attended local  schools irregularly until he was 17. Although the only books in his home  were the Bible, an almanac, and a hymnbook, Fillmore managed to educate  himself with the help of a village schoolteacher, Abigail Powers.    When he was 19, Fillmore began to study  law with Judge Walter Wood of Cayuga County. He supported himself by teaching  school. When his family moved to East Aurora, near Buffalo, New York, Fillmore  continued his study of law and his teaching. In 1823 he opened a law office  in East Aurora. Three years later he married Abigail Powers. The couple  had two children, Mary Abigail and Millard Powers. In the early years of  their marriage, Mrs. Fillmore continued to teach school and to help her  husband with his law studies.    In 1826, the year Fillmore was married,  an incident in western New York set him on the road to the presidency.    When William Morgan, a former member of the Masonic fraternal order who  had written a book that claimed to expose the order's secrets, disappeared,  the rumor spread that he had been murdered by avenging Masons. Thurlow    Weed, a newspaper publisher and politician, seized on the incident to arouse  public feeling against all secret organizations and helped to organize  the Anti-Masonic Party. Meanwhile, Millard Fillmore had been winning respect  and popularity in East Aurora. People admired his professional ethics,  temperate habits, careful speech and dress, and good looks. These qualities  caught the attention of the Anti-Masonic politicians, who were looking  for vote-winning candidates. In 1828, Weed and his group ran Fillmore for  a seat in the New York state legislature, and he was elected. Four years  later, again with Weed's backing, Fillmore was elected to the House of    Representatives in the Congress of the United States.    When the Anti-Masonic Party merged with  the new Whig Party in the mid-1830s, Fillmore became a Whig. In Congress  he was a strong supporter of Senator Henry Clay of Kentucky, the leader  of the Whigs. The two men agreed that compromise on the slavery issue was  necessary to preserve peace between the North and South.    In the important position of chairman of  the House Ways and Means Committee, Fillmore took a leading part in framing  the protective tariff (tax on imports) of 1842. The tariff raised rates  to about the high level of the tariff of 1833. That tariff was opposed  by the South and had provoked the state of South Carolina to pass its Ordinance  of Nullification, declaring the tariff void within its borders.    Fillmore did not run for reelection in    1842. He hoped for the vice presidential nomination on Clay's Whig presidential  ticket, but the party's national convention of 1844 gave that spot to Theodore    Frelinghuysen of New Jersey. Fillmore then accepted the Whig nomination  for governor of New York. In the election, however, Fillmore was beaten  by his Democratic Party opponent, Silas Wright, and Clay lost the decisive    New York vote.    The Whigs nominated Fillmore for state  comptroller in 1847. This office was second in power after the governor's  and supervised public finances and superintended the banks. Fillmore defeated  his Democratic opponent by 30,000 votes, the largest margin ever gained  by any Whig over a Democrat in New York. The victory established Fillmore  as a vote getter and put him    
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