Franklin PIERCE
- Born: 23 Nov 1804, Hillsborough, NH
- Marriage: Jane Means APPLETON
- Died: 8 Oct 1869, Concord, NH at age 64
Another name
for Franklin was 14th President Of The United STATES.
General
Notes:
Franklin Pierce
Franklin
Pierce became President at a time of apparent tranquillity. 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 themselves. 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.
Franklin married Jane Means
APPLETON. (Jane Means APPLETON was born about 1805.)
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