An anti-Free Soil cartoon shows party leaders as warlocks brewing up a poison pot. |
The history of third party
movements in this country is strewn with failure, futility, and frustration. Yet often they set the stage for great
change to come. That was certainly
true of the first important third party, the Free Soilers born on August 9, 1848 at an outdoor convention in Buffalo,
New York’s Court House Park.
The party arose from the bitter debate
about the status of territories recently obtained by conquest in the Mexican War. Southern zealots wanted the whole territory including parts of Texas, New Mexico (including the future
Arizona), California, and parts of the future states of Colorado, Utah, and Nevada
open to slavery without reservation.
Northern states had enough power in Congress to block that.
Northern Democrats, always seeking
accommodation, officially advanced the
doctrine of Popular Sovereignty—letting
the citizens of the new territories decide their status by popular election.
This outraged anti-slavery Northern Whigs
and a minority of Democrats centered
on Up State New York. These factions endorsed the Wilmot Proviso an 1846 proposed rider to an appropriation bill for the costs of negotiating a peace with Mexico. The Proviso would have banned slavery in any territory to be acquired from Mexico. Although it was defeated, advocates hoped to resurrect
it in some form.
In the run up to the 1848 Presidential
Race the Whigs, always an unstable coalition of former anti-Jacksonians, side-stepped
the issue in their platform but nominated war hero Zachary Taylor, a Louisiana
plantation and slave owner who
was presumed to be sympathetic to the extension of
slavery. Although it later turned out
that Taylor was not, outraged
anti-slavery Whigs centered in Massachusetts
and New England began to look
for alternatives.
Meanwhile the Democrats nominated Michigan Senator Lewis Cass, the leading proponent of Popular
Sovereignty leading to a similar crisis
among anti-slavery elements of that party.
Things came to a head earlier in 1847 at the New York State Democratic Convention where the majority refused to endorse the Wilmot
Proviso. Almost half of the members of
the convention, the so-called Barn
Burners centered in heavily anti-slavery Up State, walked out. But they did not
entirely abandon the party until
Cass’s nomination.
A meeting was called in Utica at which it was decided to invite
anti-slavery Whigs and members of the tiny abolitionist
Liberty Party to join the Buffalo Convention and form a new party.
Although the meeting was engineered
by the Barn Burners and supporters of the old Albany Regency, the nation’s
first state-wide political machine
which had been put together by Martin
Van Buren in the late 1820’s, the leading
strategists at the convention became Ohio’s
Salmon B, Chase, a Whig and
erstwhile maverick Democratic Senator
John P. Hale of New Hampshire. Since his election to the Senate by a surprise
coalition of minority Whigs and anti-slavery Democrats in the New Hampshire
legislature in 1847, Hale had quickly established himself as the most voracious opponent of slavery in the
Senate. His experience led him to have
faith in the possibilities of a fusion of the anti-slavery factions of
the two established parties.
Although the Free Soilers were above
all a party devoted to stemming the expansion of slavery, they were not quite
the single issue party often
portrayed in history. Their platform adopted planks shrewdly designed
to appeal to former partisans of the older parties. On the one hand they endorsed Federal spending on internal
improvements, a cause dear to Henry Clay Whigs and Westerners and on the other opposed protective tariffs, long a cornerstone
of Democratic platforms. They also
advanced a proposal for disposing of government land in the West by homesteading.
Still, their party platform
proclaimed, “...we inscribe on our banner, ‘Free
Soil, Free Speech, Free Labor and Free Men,’ and under it we will fight on
and fight ever, until a triumphant victory shall reward our exertions.”
The convention turned for the head of its national ticket to former
President Van Buren, who had been ousted
after one term by the Whigs who smeared him, unfairly, as an elitist fop and William Henry Harrison who aped the populism of Andrew Jackson. The aging former Red Fox of the Kinderhook was a shrewd politician and saw a possibility
of a comeback, or at least a vindication of his tarnished reputation. But
Van Buren had been strangely mum on
the subject of slavery in national
office, understandable as Andrew Jackson’s
Secretary of State, second Vice President, and protégée. As President he maneuvered for the
annexation of Texas, which was bitterly
opposed by anti-slavery factions.
The Free Soil Party Ticket of 1848--Martin Van Buren and Charles Francis Adams |
But Van Buren announced he had always
been an opponent of slavery’s expansion in his heart. And hoping that a ticket led by a former
President would give them instant
respectability, the convention went along.
For Vice President the convention
turned to a familiar family name—Adams.
Charles Francis Adams was the
son and grandson of Presidents. His
father, John Quincy Adams was lionized by Massachusetts Whigs as Old Man Eloquent for his long post-presidential service in the House of Representatives as an outspoken anti-slavery man. The studious young Adams was supposed to garner support among the Boston elite.
The new party gained some important support, notably from intellectuals like educator Horace Mann, who had filled John Quincy Adams’s House seat
after his death; journalist and editor Richard Henry Dana, Jr.; Charles
Sumner leader of Boston’s Conscience
Whigs and future Senator; poet/editor
William Cullen Bryant of New York City; the Quaker Hoosier John Greenleaf Whittier; and Walt Whitman who became a Brooklyn
party leader and editor of the Brooklyn
Freeman, a party newspaper.
The Free Soilers also ran candidates
for Congress and for several state legislature seats.
This Massachusetts Free Soil rally featured former anti-slavery Whig, rising Party Star, and future U.S,Senator Charles Sumner. |
The party was careful to pitch itself as moderate. It did not attack slavery as a fundamental evil or advocate for its abolition where it was in
force. Instead it argued that the
extension of slavery was a threat to
Free Labor and that blocking
expansion would eventually cause it to “wither
away” even in the Deep South. That drew the scorn of Abolitionists like
William Lloyd Garrison who charged
that it was “white manism.” Still, a lot of moderate slavery opponents
were drawn to the party.
During the campaign it became apparent that things were not
working out as hoped and planned. Of course the party had no hope in the South. That
region was split between Democrats supporting Cass, and Whigs in the corner of
slave holding Taylor. But Van Buren
could not shake the elitist reputation so successfully hung on him damaging his appeal to northern voters,
particularly in the big cities. Worse, New England Whigs deeply distrusted him as Jackson’s former crony. Many held their noses and voted for Taylor
or sat on their hands in the
election.
When the votes were counted the ticket of Van Buren and
Adams got a respectable 291,501 votes
and 10.1% of popular votes cast for a distant
third place. They failed to get a single electoral vote and were probably the margin of difference that gave the close race between Taylor and Cass to the old general.
On the bright side, the party won seats in Congress and enough state
legislative seats so that in combination with liberal Democrats and
anti-slavery Whigs they were able to elect candidates like Sumner to the
Senate. Although a small minority in both
houses, the Free Soilers in Congress became an important voice in the national debate.
After the Compromise of 1850 most Democrats drifted back to their old party.
But a stalwart few remained steadfastly with the Free Soilers.
In the election of 1852 the Party
offered little known John P. Hale
for President and Representative George
Julian of Indiana for Vice
President. The ticket garnered half of
the popular votes won by Van Buren and just over 5% of the total.
After Northern outrage against the Kansas Nebraska Act, most remaining Free Soilers followed leaders like Salmon P. Chase into becoming an important part, maybe even the backbone, of the new Republican Party, which in the four short years between its nominations of John C. Frémont in 1856 and Abraham Lincoln in 1860 became the first and only third party ever to achieve major party status.
After Northern outrage against the Kansas Nebraska Act, most remaining Free Soilers followed leaders like Salmon P. Chase into becoming an important part, maybe even the backbone, of the new Republican Party, which in the four short years between its nominations of John C. Frémont in 1856 and Abraham Lincoln in 1860 became the first and only third party ever to achieve major party status.
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