A Taylor-Fillmore Whig poster from the 1848 Presidential Election. Taylor would quickly die leaving Fillmore to finish more than three years of his term. |
Unitarian Universalists like to brag
about the distinguished folks connected to us.
We usually boast of five U.S.
Presidents—Thomas Jefferson (if
you count his theology and his own claims, not membership in a congregation), John Adams, John Quincy Adams, and William
Howard Taft. Oh, did I forget to
mention Millard Fillmore. We tend to mutter that one under our
breath.
Fillmore
is not only the butt of many jokes, but he usually is high on any list of the worst Presidents in history. His less than one full term in office was so
disastrous that his party, the Whigs
virtually disintegrated.
But
they are proud of him in his adopted home town of Buffalo, New York where they hold an annual memorial
service at his grave site featuring prominent local leaders from the many
institutions Fillmore founded or significantly contributed to. And
just to show he’s a good sport, President
Barack Obama, sends a wreath. Pause
to think for a moment the civic pride and dedication it takes to hold a
graveside memorial in Buffalo in January.
These folks are serious.
Fillmore
was born in very humble circumstances—in an honest-to-Gwad log cabin on January 7, 1900 in the Finger Lakes area of Cayuga
County. He was the seventh of nine
children to a struggling settler from New
England.
He
was entirely self educated, learning
to read from the three books in his father’s cabin—The Bible, an almanac,
and a hymnal. Bound out as an apprentice to a weaver at
the age of 14, he earned enough to buy a dictionary
and read definitions between tending the carding
machines. In the spring he would be
sent home to help with the planting.
After moving his apprenticeship to another firm in New Hope, he was able to attend the New Hope Academy briefly. In 1819 He fell in love with his teacher, Abigail Powers.
Buffalo as it looked about the time Fillmore first took up residence there to read law. |
He
worked part of a winter as a rural schoolmaster
himself to earn enough money to purchase his release from his apprenticeship
and went to reading law with Judge
Walter Wood of Montville. He moved to Buffalo, just on the cusp of its
great boom as the outlet of the Erie Canal, on the shores of Lake Erie to finish his law studies
with Asa Rice and Joseph Clary and was admitted to the bar in 1823.
Fillmore
hung out his shingle in East Aurora, about
twenty miles south of Buffalo and sent for Abigail, who had been waiting for
him to establish himself. They were
married in 1826. He prospered and his
reputation as a lawyer grew.
In
1828 he won his first election for the state Assembly. He ran on the
locally powerful Anti-Masonic Party
but supported John Quincy Adams for
re-election under the National
Republican banner, the forerunner of the Whigs. In his three one year terms he managed to
pass legislation ending imprisonment for
debt in New York and tried to end the practice of requiring religious oaths to serve in public
office.
The
family moved to bustling Buffalo in 1831.
He became one of the founding members of the new Unitarian congregation in that city the same year. His wife, a Baptist, refused to participate, perhaps putting a strain on their
marriage.
The First Unitarian Society building erected in 1833. |
Elected
to Congress in 1832 as a National
Republican with local Anti-Masonic support, he joined the new coalition of
Whigs under the leadership of Henry Clay
that was forming to oppose the policies of Andrew
Jackson. That alienated his
Anti-Masonic supporters and he declined to be nominated again.
Instead
in 1834 Fillmore joined the most prestigious law firm in western New York while
he worked to bring his old supporters into the Whigs. That didn’t prove too hard as the
Anti-Masonic Party was disintegrating.
At the time Fillmore was widely known for his liberal views, including opposition to the expansion of slavery.
He
was returned to Congress as a Whig in 1836 with the support of local abolitionists. In his three terms Fillmore opposed the Annexation of Texas as a slave state, and regularly supported
his old hero, John Quincy Adams, in
his fruitless efforts to lay anti-slavery
petitions before Congress. Elevated
to Chair of the Ways and Means Committee
under Speaker of the House Clay, he
helped move the Whig agenda including the protective
tariff.
Fillmore
opted out of a run for a fourth term in hopes of being named Vice-President on a Whig ticket with
Clay. But New York Whig boss Thrulow Weed asked him to step aside
for firebrand abolitionist William
Steward. Instead he ran for, and was defeated for governor.
Back
home in he found time to found the University of Buffalo in 1846. The same year he was elected to the new post
of Comptroller, and used that office
to modernize the New York banking system,
making it a model for Whig proposals for national reform.
During
the Mexican War, which he opposed,
Fillmore became an officer in the
New York State Militia as befitting
an elected official of his stature. It
must be said that on his watch no Mexican depredations were even attempted in
western New York.
In
1848 the Whigs, hungry for victory, bypassed party leaders Clay and Daniel Webster to nominate a popular
war hero, General Zachary Taylor, a
slave-holding Louisiana plantation owner. Party leaders turned to Fillmore, a northern
anti-slavery man to balance the ticket.
The pair campaigned on a pledge to serve all of the country and overcome
sectionalism.
Immediately
upon taking office the new administration was faced with a full-blown crisis as
southern states threatened to secede from the Union unless all of the land
stolen from Mexico including California,
New Mexico and parts of four other
future states were open to slavery. In
Congress Henry Clay cobbled together yet another compromise to try and reconcile North and South. His Omnibus
Bill which, among other things, would allow California to be admitted as a Free
State, leave the future of Kansas and
Nebraska to a decision by voters in those
territories—popular sovereignty, and
included the Fugitive Slave Act. Taylor surprised everyone with opposing
any extension of slavery and was soon at odd with his own party in Congress.
Then
one hot morning in the summer of 1850 Taylor sat down to a big bowl of chilled strawberries and cream, which
killed him, or so the story goes.
Millard Fillmore was an accidental President.
But
he was much more tractable than Taylor.
He threw his support around Clay’s Omnibus Bill despite the poison pill of the Fugitive Slave law,
despised in New England and much of the rest of the North. When the bill bogged down, he threw his
support to Democrat Stephen Douglas’s plan
to pass five separate bills
incorporating most of Clay’s proposals.
By cobbling different coalitions to pass each bill, all five arrived
with a thump on Fillmore’s desk.
He
signed the first four, but briefly dithered on the Fugitive Slave Act which
both offended his own anti-slavery views and, he knew, probably doomed his
political future if he signed it. In the
name of “national unity” and the greater good, Fillmore swallowed hard and
signed the act. He thought he was
brining about sectional peace, but only lit the long fuse of a gigantic bomb.
Both
sides hated him. Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts,
the leader of anti-slavery Whigs denounced him, “Better for [Fillmore] had
he never been born; better for his memory and the good name of his children,
had he never been President.” Neither
were the firebrands of the south appeased.
The governor of South Carolina
threatened immediate secession. Fillmore
responded by re-enforcing garrisons at Ft.
Sumter and other southern posts with Federal troops.
His
party shattered three ways. Southern
Whigs were driven to the welcoming arms of the Democrats, abolitionists seethed
and began to plot a new party, and a straggle of “moderates” supported,
tepidly, the President.
Despite
this, Fillmore was in some ways a successful executive. Coming after a string of week, incompetent,
or foolish Presidents, he was a capable administrator. And he enjoyed several major foreign policy successes,
including diffusing crises that might have led to war with Portugal, France, or England. Of course his able Secretary of State, Daniel
Webster got most of the credit.
In
1852 both Fillmore and Webster wanted the Whig nomination, for what it was
worth. Neither would make way for the
other. Party leaders tried once again to
put forth a war hero, General Winfield
Scott. Fillmore refused to endorse
the ticket. Scott was creamed, carrying only
four states. Democrat Franklin Pierce moved into the White
House and promptly tried to drink himself to death after his family was killed
in a railroad accident. Fillmore
returned to Buffalo to practice law and resume the duties of Chancellor of the University of
Buffalo, a position he held in
abstencia all during his terms as Vice President and President. Abigail died the next year leaving him a
widower with two children.
He
plotted a political comeback. Unlike
most northern Whigs, including his closest political associates, he refused to
join the new Republican Party believing its anti-slavery
position would fuel sectional conflict.
That was alright with the Republicans, who didn’t want him anyway.
Filmore's run for a return to the Presidency in 1856 under the Know Nothing backed American Party sealed his reputation's doom among most historians. |
Fillmore
consoled himself with a Grand Tour
of Europe. He was still abroad when the new American Party offered to make him
their candidate. The American Party was
the political arm of the rabidly anti-immigrant
and anti-Catholic Know Nothing Movement. In New York State some former anti-Masonic
leaders joined out of sheer opportunism.
The new party was aware that Fillmore did not share their views on
either immigration or the Catholic Church, but they were eager to field a
candidate who would, they hope, bring them national attention.
Fillmore
not only refused to campaign on the Know Nothing platform, he publicly refuted
it. He campaigned on a program of
regional reconciliation, tariff protectionism, and liberal banking laws that
were essentially the old Whig platform.
Most historians say Fillmore was crushed, carrying only Maryland. But the maiden efforts of the new Republicans
under John C. Fremont were only
marginally better. Hapless Democrat James Buchannan won election
handily. But Fillmore won 21% of the
popular vote, one of the best showings of any third party candidate ever.
Fillmore’s
association with the vile Know Nothings, despite being merely political
opportunism, sealed the scorn of most historians.
Once
again back in Buffalo Fillmore consoled himself by marring a wealth widow, Caroline McIntosh in 1858. Previously a man of only moderate wealth, his
new bride brought enough assets to erect a fine new mansion which became the center of Buffalo society. The former President busied himself in good
works and basked in the esteem of his townsfolk. In addition to his continued service to the
University, he founded and was president of the Buffalo Historical Society, the Buffalo General Hospital, and the Buffalo Club.
In
1860 he still refused to support the Republicans and denounced Abraham Lincoln as a dangerous
extremist. Despite this when Lincoln
showed up in Buffalo on his circuitous route to assume his duties in Washington
in 1861, Fillmore escorted the President elect to services at the Unitarian
Church, just has he had done nearly twenty years earlier for John Quincy Adams.
During
the war he remained critical of the Administration, but was an ardent Unionist. He assumed the command of the Union Continentals, a unit of home guard militia for men over the age
of 45.
Fillmore
began to retire from public business when his wife’s health began to decline in
the late 1860’s. He died in his beloved
Buffalo of a stroke on March 8, 1874 after uttering his stirring last
words, “The nourishment [soup] is
palatable.”
In 2012 Col. John Higgins of the New York Air National Guard laid the wreath from President Barak Obama, one of several impressive displays, at the annual grave-side memorial service. |
He
was buried under an impressive obelisk at
Forest Lawn Cemetery, where local
dignitaries gather annually to honor the President most of the rest of the
nation has forgotten.
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