l^ BIOGRAPHY MILLARD FILLMORE. BUFFALO: THOMAS k LATHKOPS, PUBLISHKRS. BIOGRAPHY MILLARD FILLMORE. vovy C-KamDs-rl's-ih , BUFFALO: THOMAS & LATHROPS, PUBLISHERS. 1856. Entered according to the Act of Congress, in the year 185^ By THflMAS & LATHROPS, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States, for trf^ Northern !)»¦ trict of New York. C\. &4 2? CONTENTS. PAGB. Intboduoiioii, 5 chapter i. His Bibth, Ancestoes, and Early Life, . . . . 11 CHAPTER n. Mb. Fillmobe's Enteance into Pdblio Life, . . . .31 CHAPTER m. Me. Fillmore's Career in Congbess, 44 chapter iv. The Twextt-Seventh Congbess, 59 CHAPTER V. The Peesidestial Campaion op 1844, 79 chapter ti. Elected Compteolleb of New York, 96 chapter tu. Vice-Peesident of the United States, .... 106 IT CONTENTS. CHAPTER Till. Mr. Fillmore President of the United States, . • • H^ chapter ix. The Compromise Measures and Fugitive Slave Law, . . 129 chapter x. First Annual Message, 156 chapter xi. Cuba and the Fillieustebs, 179 . CHAPTER Xn. Exploring Expeditions to Foreign Countries, . . . 200 CHAPTER xm. American Phincipi;.es, ........ 205 INTRODtlCTlON. In the spring of 1853, Millard Fillmore, the subject of the following biographical sketch, retired from the Presidency. Several of our most illustrious statesmen, who, at the com mencement of his administration, were master-spirits in the national councils, had been gathered to their fathers. Cal houn, indeed, had been summoned away before the dispensa tion of Providence which placed a new pilot at the helm of State, and before the portentous storm, then raging, had gathered all its blackness. His last speech in the Senate, read for him by a friend because he was too feeble to deliver it, is pervaded by dark forebodings scarcely relieved by a gleam of hope. His two great compeers, who sympathized in his apprehensions, although they did not share in his despondency, were still spared to the country, and, at the commencement of Mr. Fillmobe's administration, were leading members of the Senate. Clay had, some years before, bi^ a formal, and, as he supposed, a^ final farewell to this theater of his labors; but a great and perilous crisis had now sum moned him again to the service of his country. Webster, TI INTEODUCTION. then also in the Senate, had recently put forth one of the most powerful efforts of his eloquence for the preservation of the endangered Union. Although, to use his own language, "the imprisoned winds are let loose" — although "the east, the west, the north, and the stormy south, all combine to throw the whole ocean into agitation, to toss its billows to the skies, and to disclose its profoundest depths," he would neither shrink from his duty nor abandon hope. "I am looking out for no fragment," he says, " upon which to float away from the wreck, if wreck there must be, but for the good of the whole, and the preservation of the whole; and there is that which will keep me ^ my duty during this struggle, whether the sun and stars shall appear, or shall not appear for many days." It was in the midst of an agitation which thus aroused the energies -^ in the midst of dangers which thus alarmed the apprehensions of our greatest and most experienced statesmen, that the administration of Millard Fillmore commenced. Before he had been two months in power, there was a lull in the storm — the crisis had passed — and although a heavy ground-swell continued, for some time, to mark the violence of the recent tempest, the country was fast settling into tran quillity. As the ablest men of both political parties had lent their influence to secure the compromise, so they now united to give it stability by all the combined weight of their charac ters. Two years afterwards, both the great political parties, into which the country was then divided, solemnly endorsed it, in their national conventions, as the final settlement of a most dangerous controversy. INTEODUCTION. Vll But no sooner had the administration which had brought about this auspicious result retired from power, than other counsels began to prevail. The first Congress that met after the inauguration of President Pibbce, signalized itself by carrying; out his wishes in the repeal of a compromise of more than thirty years' standing, regarded by the country as an inviolable compact. Thus were the flood-gates of sectional agitation wantonly re-opened, and during the whole period of the present Democratic administration, the country has b^en distracted by heated controversies,, on a subject which it was supposed the compromise of 1850 had withdrawn forever from the arena of national politics. We are still in the midst of these controTersies. Two of the three great parties into which the country is now divided, insist on making the slavery question the leading issue in the approaching presidential campaign. Granting the importance of this question to be as great as these parties contend, in whose wisdom can the American people so fully confide to ' preside over its settlement, as in that of the stat^smun who, three years ago, extricated the countiy from the same dangers mto which the Democratic party has re-plunged it? He who has once piloted the tempest-tossed ship into a safe harbor, is the most suitable man to be again placed at the helm, when her moorings have been wantonly severed, and she is again drifting on the same stormy sea, exposed to be split on the same dangerous rocks. But the present importance of the slavery question is greatly over-rated. The repeal of the Missouri compromise, which had no other object than to gain the favor of the South VlLl INTEODUOTION. by opening Kansas to slavery, will injure the interest it was intended to promote. Kansas is as certain to be a free State as if the Missouri compromise were standing to-day, intact and irrepealable. So far as relates to territorial extension for their peculiar institutions, the South have gained nothing — the North lost nothing. Other laws than the Missouri com promise — laWs which no congressional enactment can repeal — the laws of climate and soil — laws which govern emigra tion, and, above all, laws written on the human hearty have decreed the exclusion of slavery from the whole territory to which the Missouri compromise applied. The pretended friends of the South have not only conferred no benefit on that section of the country, but have called into existence the most formidable party that has ever been arrayed against southern interests, and armed that party with specious and plausible arguments. Will the South support a policy so fruitless in good, a policy so teeming with evil, to them selves ? Will they act with a party that has wantonly revived an agitation which it ivas clearly foreseen would peril their most cherished interests ? So far as regards the spread of slavery, nothing ha^ been gained or lost by the repeal of the compro mise. That repeal is simply a fountain of political excitement, furnishing topics of declamation to demagogues who aim to purchase power at the expense of the public tranquillity. The American party, seeing that neither section of the country has anything to gain by the continuance of the controversy, refuse to take any part in it, except for the purpose of restoring peace. INTKODTJCTION. IX As the pai'ty which has nominated Mr. Fillmore now enters a presidential contest for the first time, it may not be inappropriate, before sketching the history of its candidate, to say a few words of its principles. They make no appeal to a love of novelty, to that reckless passion for change which delights in perpetual innovation. They address themselves, on the contrary, to the sober sense, the calm conservative sen timent of the country. They are founded on patriotism — the source of all public \irtue, the parent of all the great ' deeds that emblazon the pages of history. Love for the land that gave us birth — that instinctive feeling whieh alike leads men to repel the invader, and to preserve their institutions . from the unhallowed tpuch of foreign influence — that ennobling sentiment which so constantly triumphs over the strongest of the selfish instincts, the love of life — which pours out its blood hke water in its country's cause and counts it glory — which feels that its native air is tainted and no longer worth breathing — its native' soil polluted, and fit only to afford graves for its sons, when they cease to be its sole sovereigns — this sentiment it is on which the American party is built, and on which it rests its hopes for the success of its funda mental maxim, that Americans shall rule America. The principle is not new. Our fathers declared it when they cast off" their allegiance to the British crown, and refused to be taxed by a foreign "parliament. They embodied it in the Constitution of the country when they inserted in that instrument a provision that the two highest oflBcers of the gov ernment — the President and Vice-president of the United States — shall be native-born citizens. They recognized it in 1* • X HSfTEODfCTION. the provisions of the same instrument which forbid the election of any person to the United States Senate who has not resided in the country nine years in addition to the period Congress might require for naturalization, or of any person to the House of Repfesentatives whose residence has not extended seven years beyond the same period. The length of time aliens shall reside in the country before they can become citizens, was not fixed by the Constitution, but wisely left to the discretion of Congress. Cu-cumstances might arise requir ing an extension of the period, and Congress was clothed with the power to extend it as the exigencies of the country and the safety of its institutions should render expedient. Why raise an impassable barrier against a naturahzed citi- , zen becoming eligible, by any length of residence, to either of the highest offices ? Why take such an apparent excess of precaution as to exclude from those offices a person bom on ship-board during the voyage of his parents hither and wholly educated in this country ? We put the question to those who ridicule the idea of danger to our institutions from foreign influence, and ask if all this pains was taken to guard against an unreal danger ? From the preponderance of the native over the foreign pop ulation, a calculation of probabilities will show that there must always be a large majority of native-born members of both Houses of Congress. As the framers of the Constitution must have foreseen that the naturalized members would always be a minority, it clearly follows that they apprehended danger from the influence of even a few who might retain their foreign prejudices and sympathies, and so excluded foreigners from INTEODUOTION. XI the national councils for a long period after they had acquired the privilege of citizenship. The power granted to Congress over the whole subject of naturalization, furnishes another conclusive argument in favor of the same position. It was foreseen that the future increase of immigration might become so great, and the danger from foreign influence so augmented, that any rule of naturalization inserted in the Constitution would prove ineffectuid against the increased pressure of the evil. Congress was, therefore, in- vest«d with unlimited discretion, and left at liberty to deal with the danger according to the demands of its gTowing magnitude. The first Congress judged a residence of five years a suffi cient preparation for citizenship. At that time, and for a long period previous, nearly all our immigrants came from Great Britain. The present faciUties for crossing the ocean did not exist; the voyage had not become so cheap as to place it within the means of the poorest part of the population, nor was there in this countrj' the great demand for rude and unskilled labor which the growth of our cities and our exten sive pubUc works have since created. The bulk of our immi grant population was, at that time, more intelligent and respectable than it is now, and furnished materials for a better class of citizens. They were nearly all Protestants ; j ¦' d large majority of them were Englishmen. As Protestants,'/ they were inaccessible to the influence of a foreign hierarchy. As Englishmen, they had come to live under a government founded on the model of the British Constitution, and which, in copying from that model, had retained a great deal more than it discarded. Comparatively Jittle transformation of character Xll INTEODUOTION. was needed to bring such immigrants into full sympathy with our sentiments, into perfect harmony with our institutions. Within the last twenty years all this has changed. Our immigrants are no longer mainly Protestants. A majority of them no longer come from the country whose language we speak, by whose literature our minds are formed, from whom we have borrowed the habeas corpus, trial by jury, represen tative government, and the common law. We receive now, with a great many estimable, industrious, self-respecting people, the very dregs and scum of the population of Europe. All that is benighted by ignorance — all that is debased by superstition — all that is squalid by poverty — all that is besotted by intemperance — all that is detestable in morals — all that is odious and abominable by crime — have, for the I last few years, been poured upon our shgres, to taint our moral atmosphere, and add to the corruption of our large cities. Without any knowledge of our institutions — without even any acquaintance with our language, they are invested with the most sacred of our political privileges — the elective franchise — and either sell their votes directly to demagogues for some paltry bribe, or yield them indirectly through the influence of priests, whose wishes they are too superstitious to resist. If our fathers thought it necessary to guard so carefully against foreign influence when our immigrants, comparatively few in numbers, were of our own blood and lineage, our own language and religion, and our own habits of thought, who can consistently say that the necessity is not greatly enhanced, when, . besides the alarming increase of numbers, the character of our foreign population has become so much changed for the worse ? INTEODUOTION. xlli Another consideration of great weight in this connection, is derived from the local laws of the several States at the adop tion of the Constitution, and the passage of the present naturalization law. It is well known that the State Consti tutions then required a property qualification of some kind, generally a freehold, as preliminary to the right of suflfrage. At that time an aUen, when naturalized, did not necessarily become a voter. Under the then existing State regulations, none of that class of foreigners whose abuse of the elective franchise has given origin to the American party, would have been suffered to approach a ballot-box. None except those who had some stake in the government were allowed a voice in its policy. The extension of suffrage tiU it has, in most of the States, become universal, seems a wise change, when considered in relation to our native population. With the enlightened love of country which springs from American birth and education; with the habits of industry, thrift and enterprise so characteristic of our people, which makes the acquisition of property and social position the common aim of all ; universal suffrage is not only free from danger, but is as wise and just as it is safe. But the great mcrease of an igno rant and debased foreign population creates an imperative necessity for either restoring the property qualification, or altering the naturalization laws. At. all .events, it must be admitted, that naturalized citizens wield far more pohtical power, in proportion to their numbers, than if the possession of a freehold had remained a qualification for the right of suf frage. The law as it stands was framed with reference to a different condition of things from that in which it now operates. XIT INTEODUOTION. When it was enacted, our foreign population was neither so numerous, so ignorant, nor so dissimilar to ourselves as it has. since become; nor was it immediately invested with the nght of suff'rage, by the mere possession of naturalization papers; and, above all, the country at that time had no experience of the abuses of which we have been witnesses withm a more recent period. /(' To remedy the evils introduced into the politics of the country by demagogues who pander to the prejudices and purchase the votes of foreigners — to remove the corruption which taints the fountains of power — to restore to Americans the influence which rightfully belongs to them in the govern ment of their own country — to rekindle the fires of patriotism, and foster that national spirit which is at once the cheapest defence of the country and the surest conservator of its insti tutions — these are the purposes of the American party, which now enters the field for the first time with a candidate for the highest office of the government. That candidate having been selected, it is thought that a simple and impartial recital of the leading events of his Ufe will be acceptable to the American people. The task of preparing the following unpretending sketch has devolved on the present writer, in consequence of the absence from the country of the gentleman whose hterary talents and long personal association with Mr. Fillmore would render him the most suitable biographer of his distinguished friend. I refer to Dr. Thomas M. Footb, late Minister to Austria; who, summer before last, was urgently solicited by some of Mr. Fillmore's friends to write the history of hi» INTEODUOTION. XT administration. He at length yielded to their persuasions, and promised to prosecute the work. The writer of these pages, then in habits of daily intimacy with Dr. Foote, had frequent conversations with him relating to the plan, topics, arrangement, and mode of execution of the proposed history, and was to have assisted him in the composition of some of its chapters. The preparation of the work for the press was postponed_ during the autumn of 1854 and the following winter, in consequence of Dr. Foote's feeble health, and during the summer of 1855, by his occupation in superintend ing the building of a new house. All this while, however, it continued to be a frequent topic of conversation; and when, last fall. Dr. Footk left the country on his present European tour, there seemed a propriety, if, during his absence, circum stances should render advisable the publication of a brief sketch of Mr. Fillmore's life, that I should be entrusted with its preparation. By abridging the materials Dr. Foote would have used in a larger and less ephemeral wbrk, and giving more fullness and prominence than he had intended to Mr. Fillmore's early history, and his public life previous to his elevation to the Presidency, it was thought that a more authentic and acceptable biography could be written, than would be likely to be produced by any person not conversant with Dr. Foote's plan, and without access to his materials. I have deemed it proper to make these statements, partly as an apology, to the reader, but principally to enable him to judge of the authenticity of the following hastily written sketch, by the opportunities the writer has enjoyed for ac quiring correct information. BIOGRAPHY MILLARD FILLMORE. CHAPTER L HIS BUtTH, ANCESTORS, AND EARLY LIFE. Millard Fillmore was born in Western New York, in the township of Locke, Cayuga county, on the 7th of Januaiy, 1800. This settlement in the wilderness was at that time so new, that his father was compelled, on the occasion of his birth, to walk seven miles in the woods, in the dead of night, to the nearest physician, through a fresh fallen snow half knee deep, with wolves howling on either side of him as he pressed on his errand. Not only Mr. FUlmore's father, but his ances tor?, for three generations, were pioneers in the forest: the fam ily being a true type of the hardy enterprise of American character, whose early mission on this continent was to subdue the wilderness, and nourish, amid severe labors, th.it manly self-reliance without which the world would never have heard of American Independence or American Institutions. The noble oak which stands erect and defies the tornado, is nur tured by no green-house culture, shoots up with no mushroom rapidity, but is slowly elaborated by centuries of exposure, its fibres becoming tough and firm by long resistance to the rock ing of rude storms. And so with a national character, that has the elements of bold enterprise, and stable, enduring greatness. 18 BIOGEAPHY OF MILLAED fillmoee. It is formed and consolidated by long struggles with hardship and difficulty. The unbroken forest which our fathers en countered on these shores, and which it was one of their chief labors to fell and clear, was the school ordained by Providence for the acquisition of the self-relying and invincible energy, and severe self-denial, which carried the country through the trials of the Revolution, and infused a taste for the manly simplicity of a republican government. The sturdy strokes of the pio neer's axe not only felled the forest, but formed his own character. Of this peculiarly American labor the ancestors of Millard Fillmore performed their full share, transmitting from generation to generation the manly firmness, vigor, and self- reliance, the strong practical sense and moral robustness, to which the subject of this biography is indebted for his eminent • position. Mr. Fillmore's ancestry, which had taken root in American soil at least four generations before his birth, affords so favor able an exemplification of American character, and furnishes so many interesting incidents, that the reader will willino-ly allow us to detain him while we briefly sketch its history. The early town records of Essex county, Massachusetts, enable us to date the commencement of our narrative more than a century and a half ago. If we occasionally copy the c(uaint spelling of the old town clerks, we shall perhaps convey a more distinct impression of those olden times. John Fillmore, "saylor," married Abagail, daughter of Abraham and Deliverance Tilton, of Ipswich, June 19th,' 1701. Their children were John, born in Ipswich, March ISih, 1702 ; Ebenezer, born in Beverly,- and baptized in Wenham, July 21st, 1706 ; and Abagail, born likewise in Beverly, and baptized in Wenham, August 1st, 1708. The difl'erence be tween the places of birth and baptism of the two younoest of these children, is accounted for 'by the fact that the church in Wenham was the one nearest the residence of their parents PAEENTAaE AND ANCESTOES. 19 the North Parish in Beverly, to which the mother afterwards belonged, not being organized till December, 1715. No men tion is made of the baptism of John, the eldest son, as his mother did not unite with the church until 1705, three years after his bh'th. \ By a deed executed November 24th, 1704, "Luke Perkins, blacksmith, and Martha, his wife," conveyed for £S0 to "John Fillmore, mariner,'' a house and barn and two acres of land on the road from Wenham to Beverly, near Wenham pond. Abag^l Fillmore, though called "widow" in 1711, did not administer on her husband's estate till I7l5. This delay is accounted for by the fact that being a " saylor " or " mariner," he died at sea, and a long interval elapsed before legal evidence was obtained of his decease. It was at length ascertained that on a homeward voyage the vessel in which he sailed was captured by a French frigate, and the crew carried prisoners to Martin ique, where they suffered all the hardships of a close and cruel confinement This was during Queen Anne's war, which was terminated by the treaty of Utrecht in I7l3. Before the end of the war, these prisoners were exchanged, but nearly all of them, John Fillmore among the rest, died on board the cartel- ship on their passage home, a circumstance which gave rise to the suspicion that they were poisoned by the French. The property of which his widow was appointed adminis tratrix, consisted of the real estate already mentioned, which was valued by the appraisers at the £50 for which it was pur chased, and personal property valued at £22 13s. 6d., including " one bible and sermon books.'' Abagail Fillmore, the widow, who was again married in Beverly, November 7th, l7l7, to Robert Bell, relinquished the administration of her former husband's estate, in March, 1723, when her eldest son, John, became of age, who was then appointed administrator, " Abra ham Tilton, carpenter, and William Young, fisherman," being his sureties. By a decree of the court, the real estate is 20 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. conveyed to John Fillmore, who immediately conveys it to other parties whose names and occupations are preserved in the old records. This Fillmore estate in Beverly belonged, in 1850, to Col. Jesse Sheldon, and is situated near the North Beverly station on the Eastern Railroad. The house had not been standing for many years, but the cellar was filled up by Col. Sheldon 'after he became owner of the field. The well was still in a good state of preservation in 1850, and the cinders, yet visible about the premises, bore witness to their having been occupied by " Luke Perkins, blacksmith," the original owner who deeded it to John Fillmore, the elder. There is a tradition that Whit field held one of his famous revival meetings in the house. We have omitted to mention a most daring and remarkable exploit, which we will now describe. After the death of his ^ father, John Fillmore was apprenticed by his mother to a carpenter. Like most boys in humble hfe who listen to the conversation of sailors, he was seized with a passion for the sea. Besides the dangers of a sea-faring life, the melancholy fate of his father furnished his mother with reasons for resist ing his inclination, and detaining him at his trade. Though he yielded to her wishes, he could not repress his thirst for adventure, and he continued to importune her to allow him to make a voyage. As he approached bis majority, his mother, finding his passion for a sailor's life unabated, reluctantly yielded her consent to its indulgence, on condition that instead of going to the West Indies, with which the commerce of the colonies was mostly carried on, he would merely make a fishing voyage to the banks of Newfoundland. He accordingly shipped for a fishing voyage on board the sloop Dolphin, of Cape Ann, Mark Haskell, skipper. The sloop had scarcely reached her destination, when she was surprised bj' what proved to be a pirate ship, commanded by John Phillips, a noted pirate who then infested the American waters. The A DARING EXPLOIT. 21 discovery was made too late for escape; the crew was too weak to resist; and Haskell could only abide his fate and quietly await the event. When the pirate came alongside, a boat was sent to the sloop, demanding of its master who he was and where he was bound. From this boat's crew Haskell learned the character of the ship which had approached him. His crew, being mostly young, were struck with consternation on finding that they were in the power of Captain Phillips, the notoriovLs pirate, from whose cruelty they had everything to dread. They were soon boarded by another boat from the pirate, among whose crew Fillmore recognized a young man, three years his senior, named White, whom he had formerly known as a tailor's apprentice. When this boat returned to the ship, Phillips ascertained that there was no property which he wanted on board the sloop, but White mentioned young Fillmore to him, describing him as a bold, stout, resolute fellow, who would make a valuable addition to his crew. Phillips accordingly sent a boat again to the sloop, demanding the surrender of Fillmore, and saying that the rest of the crew might go free. Fillmore remonstrated with Haskell against his surrender, and after some hesitation, it was decided that he should not be given up let the consequences be what they might. When the boat returned without him, Phillips was greatly incensed, and sent again with orders to bring Fillmore either dead or alive, but offering, if he would come voluntarily, to release him at the end of two months. Though placing little confi dence in the pirate's word, the thought of relieving the rest of the crew from danger, induced him to trust to future chances of escape, and he reluctantly consented to go. He was conscientious as well as stout-hearted, and immedi ately resolved that no extremity of peril should induce him to sign the piratical articles. Destruction seemed to stare him in the face, and he was full of apprehension, which only showed ''22 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. that the inexperienced young man did not understand human nature as well as his captors. They, ten in number, were all picked men- — a set of the most daring and hardy looking fel lows young Fillmore had ever set his eyes on. From White's . description they had formed the opinion that he would make a worthy compeer in the bold quaUties on which they prided themselves, and they wished to secure themselves against treachery by winning his voluntary consent to their wicked partnership. He was therefore agreeably surprised to find that they did not urge him very strenuously to sign their arti cles, that they uttered no threats, and used arguments rather of a persuasive than of a compulsory nature. The captain ¦renewed his promise to release him at the end of two months, and young Fillmore, assuming an appearance of satisfaction, engaged to serve him during that term to the best of his abil- jties. He was however placed at the helm, the most labori ous post on the ship, and made to feel that his failure to sign the piratical agreement Bad increased the hardships of his condition. During the first two months no captures were made, except of some small vessels whose loading was too inconsiderable to tempt the cupidity of the pirates. When, at the expiration of his time, Fillmore reminded the captain of his promise to release him, he was told that little business had been done since he came aboard, and that he could not yet be spared. Phillips, however, promised, " on his honor," to set him free if he would serve faithfully three mohths longer. There was no alternative, and he was com pelled to comply. During those three months there were no noteworthy occur rences. A few small vessels were taken and plundered, but their cargoes were of Uttle value, and their crews dismissed unharmed except two or three robust stout-looking men, whom Phillips selected and compelled rt) sign his articles. A DAEINQ EXPLOIT. 23 When Fillmore again demanded his liberty, he was answered by such oaths and imprecations as only a pirate could use. Abandoning all hope of ever being liberated by the clemency of the captain, he made up his mind to endure his condition with as much fortitude as possible, and consoled himself with the hope that prisoners might some day be taken in concert with whom he could effect his release. From this time his suffering's and hardships were of the most aggravated charac ter. One day, when bearing down on a merchant vessel, Phillips flew into a rage because Fillmore did not steer skill fully, and swinging his broadsword around his head, cut eleven holes through his hat and the skin underneath. They chased the vessel during the whole day, and when, a.t night, they lost sight of her, the captain laid all the blame on Fill more, and abused him accordingly. Our space does not allow us to give the details of his subsequent sufferings and his narrow escapes from death, an account of which has long been in print After many trials, there were on board the pirate ship two individuals besides Fillmore who had not signed the piratical articles. Taking advantage of a drunken carousal by which the pirates celebrated a recent success, these three per sons concerted a plan for destroying the pirates and getting possession of the ship. By burning the feet of some while they were dead drunk, so as to disable them, and despatching others, including the captain, with the ship carpenter's axes, they got the upper hand of the pirates, and with the aid of some prisoners on board, consisting of Frenchmen and negroes, they carried the vessel safely into Boston. Of the pirates who were brought in, two were executed in this country, and the rest sent to England with the forfeited vessel. Fillmore had been nine months on board the ship, and the Court of Admi ralty, presided over by Lieutenant governor Drummond, which tried and condemned the pirates, expressed its sense of the daring young man's valor by giving him " Captain Phillips' 24 BIOGEAPHT OP MILLAED FILLMOEE. gun, silver-hilted sword, silver shoe and knee buckles, a curious tobacco box, and two gold rings that the pirate Captain Phil lips used to wear." White and Archer, two of the pirates, were executed June 2d, 1724, probably one or both of them in chains, as we find the bill of Robert Dobney, " smith," for " makeing of the chaines for John Rose Archer, one of the pyrates, and the hire of a man to fix him on the Gehbet at Bird Island." The Ipswich town records show that John Fillmore was married, in the early part of the following winter, to Mary Spiller. He subsequently emigrated, with his wife, to Frank lin, in Connecticut,- then a part of Norwich, where a number of the inhabitants of Ipswich had purchased a large tract of land to which some of them removed. Here the great-grand father of the ex-president, glad to abandon the sea, spent the remainder of his days in clearing the wilderness, and cultivat ing a new farm. His son Nathaniel, while yet a youth, left the paternal roof to seek his fortune in _ the wilds of Vermont, and settled in Bennington, where he afterwards married, and reared a fam ily of six children, all of whom, with one exception, are still living. That one died, a few years ago, at the age of eighty- one, and the average age of the five survivors, including the venerable father of the ex-president, who is eighty-five, is up wards of eighty years. This remarkable longevity is a bless ing inherited from progenitors whose constitutions were impaired by no vices, and rendered robust by temperate habits and manly toil. This Nathaniel Fillmore fought as a heutenant ¦under General Stark in the battle of Bennington. His son Nathaniel, the father of Millard, who was then a boy of six years, has a distinct recollection of the noise of the guns dur ing the battle, havjpg been at play, at the time, with other Uttle boys whose fathers were likewise in the engagement He says their mothers were assembled at the house of a neighbor, BATTLE OP BENNINGTON. 25 listening in anxiety and terror to the sound of the battle, aud when the boys came trooping in, in excellent spirits, and ¦were asked by one of these weeping wives if they were not afraid their fathers would be kiUed, they promptly answered, "No: they knew their fathers were more than a match for the regulars." After having fought in his country's defence, Nathaniel Fillmore continued to reside at Bennington, enjoying the independence he had helped purchase, till he ended his days in 1814. Nathaniel Fillmore, his son, who was bom at Bennington, on the 1 9th of April, 1771, removed, in early Ufe, into Western New York, which was then a wilderness, and settled in Cayuga county. He married Phebe Millard, daughter of Doctor Abi- ather Millard, of Pittsfield, Massachusetts, a woman of native intellect, grace, and refinement, which, in a more exalted social rani, would have attracted general homage. Mr. Fillmore is no exception to the rule that distinguished men have generally had superior mothers. Married at the early age of sixteen, she at once evinced all the judgment of a mature and experi enced woman in managing her domestic affairs, and counseling her husband in the difficulties of his hard pioneer life. , Never was a mother more loved and venerated by her children, and though she has been a quarter of a ceiltury in her grave, her son, whose national reputation she did not live to witness, can not even now mention her without evident emotion. Not long after the birth of Millard, her husband lost his property by a ' bad title to the miUtary lands he had purchased, and removed in 1802 to Sempronius, (now Niles,) in Cayuga county, where he resided till 1819, when he removed to Aurora, about eighteen miles from Buffalo, where he still resides, and where, until within the last few years, he cultivated a small farm with his own hand& We have been thus particular in tracing the history of Mr Fillmore's ancestors, because the party by which he has been 2 26 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. nominated will feel a just pride in knowing that he is descended from a long line of virtuous, hardy, patriotic and purely Am erican progenitors, whose character was formed by purely American influences. Including the son of the ex-president, the family can be traced on American soil for six generations, and, as has been said of that of Washington, its history gives proof " of the lineal and enduring worth of the race." Though none of Mr. Fillmore's ancestors rose to wealth or high pubUc station, none of them fell below the standard of industrious ajid virtuous respectability, and when brought to the test, the fam ily has always acquitted itself with courage, firmness, and honor. " Hereditary rank may be an illusion ; but hereditary VIRTUE gives a patent of innate nobleness beyond all the blazonry of the Herald's College."* Millard remained with his father till be was about fifteen years of age. During his early childhood he was a sickly and' somewhat backward boy, but when his constitution began to acquire more vigor, he evinced that love of reading and eager appetite for knowledge by which a superior mind us.ually gives the first indications of its existence. The limited means of his father prevented , his enjoying any advantages of education beyond the common schools of his neighborhood, which, from the newness of .the country, were probably not of a very high order. He rapidly acquired all that his teachers had to impart and devoured, in the intervals of farm labor, every stray book that fell in his way. This, assuredly, was not a superior education ; but it has been substantially the education of a great majority of American youth, since the first settie- ment of the country. ' Washington's early education was no better ; FrankUn's not as good ; and for a really robust mind, the kind of training it affords is not without its advantages. In such minds it fosters that strong intellectual thirst which ¦* Irving's Life of ¦VTashington. EAELT EDirOATION. 27 is indispensable to the successful pursuit of knowledge, and without which all schools, and all the elaborate appliances of instruction, are idle and unavailing. The mind is not, as in many institutions of learning, set to studying subjects which are either above its capacity, or in which it feels no interest ; it never, therefore, becomes cloyed or discouraged; curiosity is never blunted; and the keen mental hunger which results from scanty aUment, not only keeps the- attention vigorously awake during the process of acquisition, but in the long inter vals of labor, leads the mind back to the ground it has gone over, and cultivates that habit of reflecting on one's knowledge, without which it is of little use. It is a hard discipline, but many great minds have been formed by it; and no American youth, with the examples before him which the history of his country affords, need despair, if he has brains and resolution, of acquiring all the information requisite for eminent useful ness. Not that colleges are either useless or unimportant; but they have nothing better to impart than a keen appetite for knowledge, energetic mental action, and confirmed habits of reflection. These are the keys of the temple of science, and whoever possesses them has nature's diploma, whether he has or has not been honored with a coUege parchment. At the age of fifteen, Millard was sent to learn the clothier's trade, a business which, as then conducted, furnished employ ment during only a portion of the year. When he had remained four months with his master, he returned home to spend the winter, and earnestly remonstrated with his father against being sent back, assigning as a reason that he wished to learn the trade, but had been kept, a great part of the time, at other employments. Thus early did he display one of the leading characteristics to which he is indebted for his success in life — impatience of doing things by halves, or of pretending to do a thing ai\d not doing it thoroughly. His father considered his request reasonable and granted it. 2S BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. promising to find him another place. Mr. Fillmore had a near neighbor who was a clothier, but he declined to take Millard, because he had already as many apprentices as he could employ. The father, therefore, rode several days for the purpose of looking up a place, but without any success. Some time afterwards, one of his neighbor's apprentices was taken sick, and he applied for Millard's services for a few weeks till he should recover. Millard was permitted to go, and during those few weeks showed so much assiduity, and proved himself so capable, that his employer was unwilUng to part with him, and applied to his father to have him remain as an apprentice. An arrangement was soon agreed upon, it being one of the stipulations that the boy should work for his master only when employed on the business he went to learn, and that the rest of the time his services should belong to his father. No indenture was drawn, each party considering the word of the other a sufficient guarantee for the fulfiUment of the conditions. While learning his trade, young Fillmore taught school winters, and very soon becoming qualified for a teacher, he was employed in that capacity, and for several years occa sionally eked out his scanty means by this laborious but useful occupation. As" his faculties unfolded with increasing years, the youth began to feel a dawning consciousness that he was born for a higher destiny than carding wool and dressing cloth. 'At the age of nineteen, he attracted the favorable attention and made the acquaintance of the late Walter Wood, Esq., of Cayuga county, who discovered, beneath the rude exterior of the clothier's apprentice, indications of superior talent, which he urged him to cultivate. By the assistance of this estimable gentieman, he was enabled, with the consent of his father, to buy his time and devote himself to study. He was received into the office of Judge Wood, who had a largo law library, though h"e did but little professional business. LAW STITDIES. 29 being prindipally occupied in the management of a large estate. liere young Fillmore read law and general literature, and, Uke Washington at the same age, he found employment as a surveyor on the new lands of his patron. By the occa sional practice of surveying, and teaching school a part of the year, he avoided incurring a larger debt to his benefactor than he was able afterwards easily to pay. In the fall of 1821, Mr.'FiUmore removed to Erie county, and the next spring entered a law office in Buffalo, maintain ing himself by teaching school while pursuing his legal studies. After a year passed in this laborious manner, he was admitted to the Court of Common Pleas, in the spring of 1823. He immediately removed to the village of Aurora, where he opened an office, and devoted himself to the practice of his profession. , Such was the early life of a man who was subsequently honored with responsible civil trusts, rose to fill the highest office of the country in a great and memorable crisis, and now ranks among the most eminent statesmen of his time. His youth was marked by prudence, energy, perseverance, and good sense, and gave evidence of talent; but though it showed the promptings of a moderate and reasonable ambition, it afforded no indications from which even a sagacious observer could have predicted Mr. Fillmore's present eminence. He was like one of those sites in the vast and then uncultivated West, which have since risen to be great cities and important marts of trade. When Millard FiUmore was a boy in the backwoods, land in Buffalo or Chicago would have brought no higher price in the market than millions' of acres of the surrounding country. The men who first got a glimpse of its capabilities, and laid out village lots, showed by the prices at which they sdld them, that they had no suspicion of the im mense fortune which was passing out of their hands. Who was there, at that early day, that could have picked out the 3,0 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED IlLLMOEE. particular acres whose value would be a thousand fold of that of the average acres of the boundless West ? Or who, from the great mass of humble and laborious American youth, could have then selected the particular one that should win the highest honors of the RepubUc ? Who would have suspected he was that unassuming young man ^ho has just gone to a country viUage to establish himself as a lawyer ? But the homespun garb of that young man covers talents which will cause us to hear fronj him again in a wider theater. ELEOTION TO THE LEGISLATUKE. 31 CHAPTER IL MR. Fillmore's entrance into public life. Mr. Fillmore continued to reside at Aurora until the spring of 1830. During these seven years, his professional practice, (as would be inferred from his location, in a purely agricultural district) was not large; but all the cases in which he was em ployed were managed with so much ability that his reputation as a lawyer continued steadily to rise, until it attracted the favorable attention of his professional brethi'en in Buffalo, whither he was induced to remove by the ofier of a highly advantageous connection with an older member of the bar. During his residence in Aurora, Mr. Fillmore was married, in 1826, to Abagail, daughter of Rev. Lemuel Powers, a lady of great moral worth, of modest and unobtrusive deportment and remarkable intelligence and good sense. She was of Massachusetts descent being of the stock of the Lelands, and one of the 9,624 descendants of Henry Leland, of Sherburne, one of the early settlers of the country. In the Leland family magazine, published in 1850, the names of all its members are recorded, and among other well executed engravings, it contains a likeness of Mrs. Fillmore, accompanied by a brief sketch of her Ufe. Mr. Fillmore's first appearance in public Ufe was during his residence in Aurora. In the fall of 1828 he had become so favorably known to the citizens of Erie county, that he was elected as their representative in the State Legislature, and took his seat in that body the January following. In the 32 BIOGEAPHT OP MILLAED FILLMOEE. •'Political History of New York," written by Judge Hammond, before Mr. Fillmore had become much known in national politics, we find the following mention of his entrance into public life: "Several 6f the western counties were represented by anti-masons; and among the most prominent of them were .Millard Fillmore, from Erie; Philo C. Fuller, of Livingston and Robert C. Nicholas, of Ontario." The fact that Mr. Fillmore commenced his pubUc life as a prominent member of the anti-masonic party, which had then just arisen in Western New York, renders it proper that we should make a few observations on the character of that party. Mr. Fillmore's prominent position in it was the natural con sequence of his superior talents ; the fact that he belonged to it, may require a different explanation. Had it not been for recent local occurrences of remarkable atrocity, which, from the mystery in which they were shrouded, inflamed pubUc curiosity in proportion as they baffled the efforts of justice, and which kept the whole community in a furor of excitement that has hardly a parallel in history, Mr. FiUmore would have regarded the masonic. order, as all just minds had previously regarded it and as all just minds now regard it, as a perfectly innocent and harmless institu tion ; in fact, merely a charitable and social club, designed for the promotion of good feeUng among its members, and the relief of their indigent brethren. It is an ancient institution, made respectable by the many eminent men who have be longed to it ; and, by the secrecy of its proceedings, appeaUng strongly to a principle of human nature, which has displayed its activity in every age of the world. The celebrated Eleu- sinian and other mysteries of the Greeks and Romans; the Esoteric doctrines of the ancient philosophers; the sect of Essenes among the Jews; the Templars of the middle ages; the order of Odd Fellows in our own times, and the secret societies in om- colleges, are illustrations of how congenial it is ANTI^MASONET. ,33 to the human mind to participate in proceedings from all knowledge of which curious outsiders are excluded. Provi ded the objects of such societies are innocent and praiseworthy, their secrecy is no more deserving of censure than is that honorable confidence by the violation of which one would forfeit his claim to the character of a gentleman. The seoresy of the Free Masons was, therefore, in itself, no valid ground of objection to their fraternity, and nothing could well have been more frivolous than the formation of a party merely to oppose this feature of the masonic institution. The idea that the anti-masonic party was formed for this purpose, is a misconception which does great injustice to the many able and respectable men who were members of it. The fundamental principle of the anti-masonic .party was the SUPREMACY OF THE LAWS. Facts of a most extraordinary nature, which had forced themselves on public attention, led to the conclusion that the existence of masonry was incon sistent with the regular administration of justice. This conclu sion was, no doubt founded on too narrow a basis of facts. It was very much like the rejection of Christianity by a resident of a CathoUc country, who judges of the religion by the only instances of which he has any knowledge, namely, those which fall under his own observation. The fact that Wash ington, and indeed most of the distinguished public men of the country, had been members of the masonic order, ought to have been regarded as a proof that masonry, as they under^ ¦stood if, required nothing inconsistent with their obligations to • their country, or which conflicted with the unlimited suprem acy of the laws. But the same principle of human nature which causes us to be more deeply impressed by the fall of a building on the opposite side of the street, which kills half a dozetr men, than we should be by hearing that an earthquake in China had engulphed a city of two millions of inhabitants, will 'invariably color men's views of any particular mstitution 34: BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. in accordance with the specimens with which they are most intimately conversant. The best apology for the anti-masons is to be found in the facts in which the party had its origin. A simple relation of these will be a sufficient justification for the opposition to ma sonry with which Mr. FiUmore was identified, on his first entrance into public life. Occurrences which so powerfully aroused piblic indignation as to create a political party that extended over a great part of the country, and embraced a full proportion of able and experienced men, and whose nomi nation for the presidency was accepted by a man of the char acter and eminence of William W'irt — occurrences which led to these important results, could hardly have done otherwise than make a deep impression on a young man of twenty-sk, residing in the section of country which was the scene of the outrage. Had he been indifferent amid the deep excitement of the whole commuriity around him, it would have argued a stoical apathy and callousness of feeling, not only discreditable to the heart of a young man, but implying, in a person of any age, a lack of human sympathy, and of that quick resentment of injustice which is one of the best attributes of manhood. At Batavia, a beautiful village in Western New York, which had become a place of importance when Buffalo was a mere cluster of rude dwellings, there resided, in 1826, a printer, named William Morgan. His business was not thriving, and being a royal arch mason, he hit upon the expedient of replenishing his pockets by divulging the secrets of his order. A rumor soon became current that Morgan was preparing a book on masonry, and attracted the attention of several of the masonic lodges of Western New York. On the 11th of Sep tember, the master of a masonic lodge at Canandaigua, a town some fifty miles distant, procured a warrant to arrest Morgan on the charge of stealing a shirt and cravat and, with two or three other masons, proceeded to Batavia, where they ABDUCTION OF MOEGAN. 35 caused him to be arrested, hurried him into a carriage, con veyed him to Canandjugua, and brought him before the justice of the peace who had issued the warj-ant. He was imme diately discharged, there being no evidence that he was guilty of the larceny complained of, but immediately re-arrested on a small debt, which had been assigned to the same master- mason who had procured the first warrant. Judgment was rendered against Morgan for two doUars, an execution instantly issued, and he was committed to close confinement in the Canandaigua jail. Here he remained but a fevt* hours.. He was discharged at a late hour of the same evening, and imme diately after leaving the prison doors, he was seized, gag^ged, and put into a covered carriage, which was driven two days without interruption, until, on the evening of the 14th of Sep tember, it reached the Niagara river. This was accompUshed by relays of horses and the agency of many different individ uals ; and Morgan was confined in the magazine of Fort Niag ara, at the mouth of the river. This bold and unprecedented outrage had been so skillfully planned, and was executed with so much address and caution, that it was for a long time impossible to penetrate the secrecy in which the conspirators had veiled their movements. The rumor which had been for some time current in Batavia of Morgan's intention to pubUsh a book reveaUng the secrets of masonry, seemed to afford a clue to the motives of this great outrage. It was known that he had been remonstrated with by his brother masons, and that all their efforts to induce him to suppress his book had produped no impression on him. A piibUc meeting was held, and a committee appointed, who proceeded to Canandaigua to investigate t>e circumstances of Morgan's disappearance. All they were able to ascertain was, that Morgan had been seized immediately on his release from prison, hurried into a carriage, and driven off by night, in the direction of Piochester. When the result of this investigation 36 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. became known it created intense pubUc excitement. A great crime, the result of an extensive and deep-laid conspiracy, had been committed. A citizen had disappeared under circum stances which justified the suspicion that the hands which conveyed him away had been stained with his blood. PubUc meetings were held in a great many towns, particularly those through which the circumstances attending the conspiracy indicated that Morgan had been carried, and committees were appointed to investigate the facts. These meetings had no political purpose, nor any other object than to ferret out an unexampled crime, which was so shrouded in mystery that it inflamed curiosity not less than it aroused resentment. They were composed indiscriminately of men of both political parties, and no motive was avowed but the praiseworthy one of inves tigating a crime committed against the liberty, if not the life, of an American citizen. Even the masons were appealed to, to assist in these investigations, and told that if they wished to wipe out a blot from their escutcheon, and protect themselves from suspicion, they should lend their aid in vindicating the ¦violated majesty of the laws. These committees of investigation encountered unexpected obstacles, and a long time elapsed before they were able to trace the course of the conspirators to Fort Niagara. At first the crime was supposed to be the work of a few misguided persons, acting without the sanction of the fraternity ; although there were some, who, from the beginning, held the whole order responsible. As the investigations proceeded, the num ber of jthese increased, until it finally embraced a large portion of the community. It was observed that 'with scarcely an exception, no mason rendered any assistance in the investio-a- tion. It was discovered that every person implicated in the foul transaction was a mason. > Masons attempted to cover the whole investigation with ridicule, affected to disbeUeve that any crime had been committed, and. some even went so far as ABDUCTION OE ilOEGAN. 37 to s&y, that if Morg-an had been made away with, the trans action was perfectly justifiable. They taunted the committees with, their inability to accomplish anything, when judges, jurors and sheriffs ¦vyere masons ; witnesses were mysteriously spirited away ; the committees vilified and abused ; and in the exasperation which foUowed, the conviction became general among those who were not masons, that the institution was responsible for the crime which thus eluded public justice. The precise fate of Morgan, after his confinement in Fort Niagara, never became known. But at this day there remains no doubt that he was murdered in cold blood, by members of the masonic fraternity, to prevent the disclosure of their secrets. It is not probable that, at the beginning, they con templated the commission of so foul a crime ; but when they had once abducted their victim, they knew no other way to dispose of him. A second crime became necessary for the purpose of conceaUng the first The publication of Morgan's book, which was not prevented by his abduction, made known the obUgations taken by masons in joining the order. Considering the circumstances under which they were brought to Ught it is no wonder that these oaths received a Uteral interpretation. Theiy were probably regarded by most of those who took them, as a mere form, without meaning, for it was established by the testimony, both of adhering and seceding masons, that in one of them (called the royal arch) the candidate swears that he will assist a brother mason in distress, and espouse his cause, so far as to extricate him from the same, if in his power, whether he he right or wrong; that he -will conceal the secrets of a brother, given him in charge as such, rrturder and treason not excepted; and in other oaths the candidate binds himself to avenge the violated secrets of the lodge, by the irifiiction of death on the offender, and to revenge the wrongs of a brother to the utmost extremity. 38 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. These oaths being made public immediately after the com mission of a great crime, by the agency of masons, and in the face of their attempt to screen the perpetrators from justice, nothing was more natural than that the community in which it had been committed should suppose that the oaths were not mere unmeaning forms, but obligations assumed in good faith, and to be strictly interpreted. " If this be masonry," said an outraged community, " it is the duty of good men to unite and put it down." Had the masons of Western New York co-operated in the efforts to bring the conspirators to justice, the nature of their institution would not have been so misconceived. When, iff January, 1827, Lawson and others were brought to trial, the public expected deveJopments which would clear up the- mystery. But by a piece of adroit management, tjie facts which the public .curiosity so eagerly craved, were still kept shrouded from ¦view. Contrary Jo expectation, the de fendants pleaded guilty, and thus excluded all testimony. The community was raised to a stiU higher pitch of excite ment Judge Throop, in sentencing the prisoners, addressed them in the foUowing language. " Your conduct has created, in the people of this section of Ihe country, a strong feeling of virtuous indignation. The court rejoices to witness it — to be made certain that a citizen's person can not be mvaded by lawless violence, without its being felt by every individual in the community. It is a blessed spirit, and we do hope that it will not subside ; that it wiU be accompanied by a ceaseless vigilance and untiring activity, until every actor in this profli gate conspiracy is hunted from his hiding-place, and brought before the tribunals of his country, to receive the punishment merited by his crime. W^ think we see in this public sensa tion, the spirit which brought us into existence as a nation, and a pledge that our rights and Uberties are -destined to endure." ABOLITION OF IMPEISQNMENT FOE DEBT. 39 Up to this time, the excitement had not taken a political turn. Baflied in their attempts to ascertain the facts, it is not surprising that the community indulged in dark suspicions, nor that horrible rumors got afloat, and were received with im plicit credence. The public mind was lashed into a stale bordering on fury. Under any other government than ours, there would have been serious outbreaks, ending in violence and bloodshed. But in accordance with the genius of our institutions, a pohtical direction was given to the excitement, and it was aimed to bring; the elective franchise to aid the tribunals of justice, which were set at defiance. From this account of the origin of anti-masonry, it will be seen that it was not, as is generally supposed, founded 'on a blind and indiscriminate opposition to secret societies, but aimed at the less frivolous, and entirely commendable object of sustaining the supremacy of the laws. That it mistook the character of the institution it opposed, was an unavoidable consequenie of the extraordinary facts by which a previously indifferent community were startled into an active, but con stantly baffled attempt to investigate the subject In personal character and influence, the anti-masonic party was one of the most respectable that has ever appeared in our poUtics. During the three years that Mr. FiUmore was a member of the New York Legislature, it was a body of great ability, em bracing some of the most distinguished men that have ever figured in New York politics. As the Democratic party was largely in the majority, and under the discipline of experienced leaders, a young member of the opposition, naturally modest and unassuming, had Uttle opportunity to distinguish himself. Mr. ]5'illmore, however, made a favora,ble impression from the very first ; and in all measures not of a party character, his opinion soon came to be regarded as of great weight He made no attempts to show off his abiUties ; he never spoke for display ; but the clearness with which his views were formed, 4:0 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. the modest brevity with which he explained them, the candor, discretion and good sense which he uniformly evinced, gained for him a strong hold on the confidence of his associates. One of the measures in which he felt great interest was the aboU- tion of imprisonment for debt. The bill, as it stands on the statute book, was drafted by him and the. late Hon. John C. Spencer, and to their zealous advocacy it was principaUy in debted for success. The impression which Mr. Fillmore — a young man without experience, and barely twenty-nine years of ace — made during the first session he served in the Legis lature, may be judged of by the manner his return to that body the next year is mentioned by Judge Hammond. He says: '*The anti-masonic party had not increased their num bers in the Assembly, but they had greatiy added to the talents of that branch of the Legislature. Mr. Granger, Mr. Fillmore, Mr. Nicholas, and Mr. P. C. Fuller were again re turned. To these strong and powerful representatives in the Assembly, they this year added Thurlow Weed, of Monroe, and Abner Hazeltine, of Chautauque county." * Speaking in another place of the anti-masonic members of the Legislature, he mentions the names of several, including Mr. Fillmore, and says, they " were all men whose talents would have done credit to any deliberative body ; and the address and eloquence of some of them would have added luster to any legislative assembly in the world." It can not but be regarded as creditable to the talents of an inexperienced young man from the new setUements of West ern New York, that notwithstanding the native modesty of his character, he immediately took rank with the ablest mem bers of the body. Lest it should be thought that these views of his early pubUc career are colored by a knowledge of his subsequent success, we insert the following description written * Political History of New York. A LEGISLATIVE POETEAIT. 41 at the time. It is one of a series of " Legislative Portraits," which appeared in the Albany Evening JouiA, during the session of 1830. They were written by an e^erienced ob server, and included Only prominent members of the Legis lature : " No. VI. — ^Millard Fillmore, of Erie county, is of the middle stature — five feet nine inches in height. He appears to be about thirty-five years of age, but it is said he is not more than thirty, of Ught complexion, regular features, and of a mUd and benign countenance. " His ancestors were among the hardy sons of the North, and, during the war of the Revolution, were Whigs, inhabiting the Green Mountains of Vermont. Mr. Fillmore, from the commencement of his pohtical career, has been a repubUcan. He is, in the strictest sense of the term, a self-made man. He was educated and reared in the western district of our State. At an early period of Ufe he went to the fuUing busi ness; but naturaUy of an inquiring mind, and anxious to in crease his limited stock of knowledge, his leisure hours were occupied in reading. When about twenty years of age, he retired from his former pursuits, and after having studied the law as a profession, he was Ucensed to practice. He was a member of the last Legislature. " Although the age of Mr. FiUmore does not exceed thirty years, he has all the prudence, discretion, and judgnaent of an experienoed man. He is modest retiring, and unassuming. He appears to be perfectly insensible of the rare and happy quaUties of mind for which he< is so distinguished. He ex hibits, on every occasion, when called into action, a mildness and benignity of temper, mingled with a firmness of purpose, that is seldom concentrated in the same individual. His in tercourse with the bustling \^rld is very limited. His books, and occasionally the rational conversation of inteUigent friends, seem to constitute his happiness. He is never to be found in 42 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. the giddy mazes of fashionable life. And yet there is in his manner anjftescribable something which creates a strong im pression in W favor, and which seems to characterize him as a well bred gentieman. "He possesses a logical mind; and there is not a member of the house who presents his views, on any subject that he attempts to discuss, in a more precise and luminous manner. He seldom speaks unless there appears to be an absolute ne cessity for the arguments or explanations which he offers. Nor does he ever rise without attracting the attention of all who are within the sound of his voice — a tribute of respect paid to his youthful modesty and great good sense. " As a legislator, Mr. FUlmore appears to act with perfect fairness and impartiaUty. He examines every subject dis tinctly, for himself, and decides on its merits according to the best Ughts of his own judgment or' understanding. He is now at an age when his character is to be irrevocably fixed. As a politician, he is not formed to be great. He has none of the quaUties requisite for a political chieftain. He wants that self- confidence and assurance (if the term may be allowed,) with out which a partisan leader can never hope for followers. Mr. Fillmore's love of books and habits of thinkinar, will, ulti- mately, conduct him to a more tranquil, but higher destiny, if the one is not broken upon, and the other diverted from its natural course, to the too often polluted, and always turbulent, if not mortifying conflicts of faction. If he has not sufficient moral firmness to resist the allurements which legislation pre sents to the young and ambitious, then ought his friends to act for him, and refuse him a re-nomination. It is a life which not only casts to the winds of heaven all employment as a professional man, but it uproots, sooner or later, the germs of industry, and the delights of study. These are the admoni tions of age and experience. " As a debater, Mr. Fillmore occupies a very elevated stand ME. fillmobe's modestt. 43 in the house. His manner is good ; his voice agreeable. To ri ' o ward his opponents he never faUs to evince a most studied deUcacy. He is mild and persuasive, sometimes animated. His speeches are pithy and sententious ; always free from idle and vapid declamation. His arguments are logically arranged, and presented to the house without embarrassment or con fusion." The advice which this writer tendered to Mr. Fillmore, to retire from pubUo life, was doubtless meant for his private advantage, rather than that of the country. There can be no doubt of the soundness of 'the general principle, that when a young lawyer allows himself to be allured into politics, he sacrifices his prospects of professional eminence. But in Mr. Fillmore's case, the very love of study which is assigned as a reason for retirement has ensured a hearty devotion to quiet pursuits whenever he has been released from the calls of pub lic duty. The lack of the self-confidence and assurance deemed essential to a great party leader, has not interfered, as was predicted, with Mr. Fillmore's poUtical success, but, on the contrary, has inspired additional public confidence, from the conviction that he is not governed by self-seeking ambition. May the day be far distant when the American people shall prefer bold assurance to modest merit! Washington possessed as little of the self-confident and assuming qualities which are considered essential in party leaders, as did Mr. FiUmore ; but in both cases the American people have had the good sense to recognize their merits. 44 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. CHAPTER IIL MR. Fillmore's career in conokess. Mr. FUlmore's term of service in the New York Legislature expired in 1831. In the faU of 1832 he was elected by his district as its representative in Congress. During the first sessions in which he served, the national bank was the en grossing political topic. General Jackson's celebrated veto and his removal of the deposits had created great pubUc excitement; but Mr. FiUmore did not a-s will afterwards appear, attach that extreme importance to a national bank which was attrib uted to it by his party. He would not, therefore, have made a figure in the stirring debates of the period, even if he had been less inexperienced and unassuming. More anxious to discharge his duty faithfully than to make a display of his abilities, he served in the twenty-third Congress, with credit indeed, but without any very marked distinction. At the close of his term, he devoted himself, with the assiduity which forms a part of his character, to the labors of his profession, in which he had risen to a high rank and enjoyed a lucrative practice. His fellow citizens, however, had too just' an appre ciation of his capacity for pubUc usefulness to allow him to remain long in retirement, and they elected him to the twenty- fifth, the twenty-sixth, and the twenty-seventh Cono-ress, hon oring him at the last election with the largest majority ever given in his district His congressional career was terminated by a letter to his constituents decUning to serve them lono-er in that capacity. CON6EESSI0NAL LABORS. 45 Up to the -time of his last re-election, the party with which Mr. Fillmore acted was in a minority in the national councils, and, as a necessary consequence, he was not assigned any position in the organization of the House corresponding to his eminent capacity. But when, after the great political revolu tion of 1840, by which the Whig party came into power, a Congress met to devise remedies for the financial distresses which had overthrown the preceding administration, Mr. Fill more at once rose to his proper level, as a man fitted for responsible leadership in great and trying emergencies. The committee of ways and means, always the most important in the House, became invested with, unusual consequence at a period when the chief duty of Congress was to introduce a new revenue system which should reUeve the country from the embarrassments under whieh it was suffering. That Mr. Fillmore was immediately made chairman of that committee, on the accession of his party to power, not only proves their sense of his capacity, but shows that during preceding sessions, when acting with a minority, he must have discharged his duties with singular abiUty and judgment. Confidence so complete could not have been lightly or hastily won. Before describing the manner in which Mr. FiUmore ac quitted himself in this responsible position, it may be expected that we should give some account of his previous congressional labors. An examination of the proceedings of Congress shows an active participation, on the part of Mr. Fillmore, in the business of the House. He laboriously investigated all tbe subjects which came before it, and frequently bore a part in its debates. When he spoke, however, it was not to win the applause of the galleries, but to advance the business of the House. Confining himself to the matter in hand, he was always clear ^nd forcible, but never aimed at a reputation for any other species of eloquence than that which consists in speaking to the point, and producing con^-iction. The interests 46 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. of his immediate constituents were very thoroughly attended to and ably advocated, and, from their importance, demanded a large amount of attention. On account of the local position of Buffalo, that city has a great stake in all that affects the safe navigation of the great lakes and western waters — a large commercial interest centering there which requires the protec tion of the national government. As was to have been ex pected, Mr. Fillmore gave his earnest and persevering support to the internal improvement policy then advocated by the Whig party. Of the other leading measures of that party, one had been temporarily settled by Mr. Clay's compromise tariff of 1833. On the othei* — the United States Bank' — Mr. FUl more did not fully sympathize with the views of his party, and the public opinion of the country has since settjed into the conviction that such an institution is not demanded by the public welfare. On the 25th of September, 1837, Mr. Fillmore delivered a speech against the bill to postpone the fourth in stalment under the deposit act of 1836. The purport of the speech having been erroneously reported in the Globe, he ¦ addressed to the pubUshers the following note : "HonSE OF Eepresentatites, ¦> September 2Ttli, 1837. / " Gentlemen : My attention has been this moment drawn to- a remark in the Globe of last evening, purporting to give the proceedings of the House on Mondaj'' evening, in which I find the following statement: " 'Mr. Fillmore resumed and continued his remarks on the subject with the addition of a lengthy argument in favor of a Bank of the United States.' " " Passing over some evident misapprehensions of yow re porter as to the purport of my remarks generally, I wish to say that he is entirely and most singulariy mistaken in saying that I made a lengthy argument in favor of a United States Bank. I made no argument in favor of the United States Bank, nor of a United States Bank; but, on the contrary, expressly disclaimed ever having been the particular friend of UNITED STATES BANK. 47 the United States Bank, and expressed my sincere doubts whether the incorporation of a new United States Bank, at this time, would reUeve the present embarrassments of the community. WUl you do me the justice to correct the mis take ? Respectfully yours, "Millard Fillmore. "Messrs. Blair and Rives." We have made this quotation to show that Mr. FUlmore's views were in advance of those of his party on a question respecting which there has now ceased to be any difference of opinion. A subject which gave rise to much warm discussion in the twenty-fifth Congress, and created great excitement in various parts of the country, was the refusal to receive the abolition petitions which were poured in great numbers into both Houses. Mr. Fillmore, Uke Mr. Clay, was in favor of the reception of such petitions and having them referred to an appropriate committee and reported on. Mr. Fillmore supported this poUcy only by his votes, but Mr. Clay spoke warmly and strongly in its favor, urging reasons of. great weight and force. To say nothing of its injustice, there can be no doubt that the refusal to receive such petitions was an insane and short-sighted poUcy, and one of the chief agencies in fanning the flame of sectional excitement and confirming sectional prejudices. While very few in any part of the country were in favor of abolishing slavery in the District of Columbia, large masses of the people regarded the right of petition as sacred and inestimable, and the abolitionists found themselves reinforced by multitudes who disapproved of their leading purpose, but were willing to nnite with them in the assertion of what they regarded as an inviolable right Had the petitions been referred, no commit tee would have reported in favor of granting their prayer, and • the only consequence would have been a more public state ment of the reasons why the abolition of slavery in the District 48 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. of Columbia was both inexpedient in itself, and inconsistent with impUed obligations to the States of Maryland and Virginia. ,Mr. Clay's views (in which Mr. FiUmore sympathized) as to the proper manner of treating such petitions, are sufficiently indicated in the foUowing extract from the proceedings of the Senate. A petition had been presented, signed by a large number of ladies in the State of New Jersey, praying for the immediate abolition of slavery in the District of Columbia. A motion was made to lay the petition on the table : "Mr. Hubbard moved to lay that motion on the table. " Mr. Morris asked for the yeas and nays. " Mr. Clay wished the motion withdrawn for a moment It was manifest that the subject of slavery in the District of Columbia was extending itself in tiie public mind, and daily engaging more and more of the pubUc attention. His opin ions, as expressed in the Legislature of the country, were, he beUeved, perfectly well known. He had -no hesitation in say ing that Congress ought not to do what was asked by the petitioneifs without the. consent of the people of the District of Columbia. He was desirous of inquiring of the Senator from New Jersey, or any other conversant with the' subject whether the feeUng of aboUtion in the abstract was extending itself in their respective States, or whether it was not be coming mixed up with Other matters — such, for instance, in the belief that the sacred right of petition had been assailed. It became the duty of the Senate to inquire into this business, and understand the subject well. " There were many, no doubt, of these petitioners, who did not mean to assert that slavery should be abolished, that were contending for what they understood to be a great constitu tional right. Would it not then, under this view of the sub ject, be the best course to allay excitement and endeavor to calm down and tranquilize the public mind ! Would it not be wiser to refer the subject to the Committee for the District of Columbia, or some other committee, that would eUcit all the facts, reason coolly and dispassionately, presenting the subject in all its bearings to the citizens of non-slaveholding States, and in a manner worthy of the great subject? Would ABOLITION PETITIONS. 49 not such a proceeditig be well calculated to insure harm'ony and amity in all parts of the Union? On this subject there was, he was asrare, a great diversity of opinion, and he rose merely for the purpose of makjng these suggestions to the Senate." Mr. Fillmore's supporting the right of petition merely by his vote, did not satisfy the abolitionists of his district and left them in doubt as to the precise character of his views. When, therefore, in 1838, he was a candidate for re-election, they ad dressed him a letter of inquiry, to which he made the follow ing reply : "Buffalo, October 17th, 1838. "Sir: — Your communication of the 15th inst, as chairman of a committee appointed by '¦The Anti-Slavery Society of the County of Erie,' has just come to hand. You solicit my answer to the following interrogatories: " ' 1st Do you believe that petitions to Congl'ess on the subject of slavery and the slave trade, ought to^ be received, read, and respectfully considered by the representatives of the people ? ' " ' 2d. Are you opposed to the annexation of Texas to this Union under any circumstances, so long as slaves are held therein ? ' " ' 3d, Are you in favor of Congress exercising all the con stitutional power it possesses, to abolish the internal slave trade between the States?' " ' Are you in favor of immediate legislation for. the abolition of slavery in the District of Columbia?' " I am much engaged, and have no time to enter into an argument or to explain at length my reasons for my opinion. I shall, therefore, content myself for the present by answering all your interrogatories in the affirmative, and leave for some future occasion a more extended discussion of the subject. I would, however, take this occasion to say, that in thus frankly giving my opinion, I ¦B'ould not desire to have it understood in the nature of a pledge. At the same time that I seek no dis guises, but freely give my sentiments on any subject of in terest to those for whose suffrages I am a candidate, I am 60 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. opposed to giving any pledges that shall deprive me hereafter of all discretionary power. My own character must be the guaranty for the general correctness of my legislative deport ment On every important subject I am bound to deliberate before I act, and especially as a legislator, to possess myself of all the imformalion, and listen to every argument that can be adduced by my associates, before I give a final vote. If I stand pledged to a particular course of action, 1 cease to be a responsible agent, but 1 become a mere machine. Should subsequent events show beyond all doubt that the course I had become pledged to pursue was ruinous to my constituents and disgraceful to myself, I have no alternative, no opportunity for repentance, and there is no power to absolve me from my obligation. Hence the impropriety, not to say absurdity, in my views, of giving a pledge. " I am aware that you have not asked any pledge, and I believe I know your sound judgment and good sense too weU to think you desire any such thing, li was, however, to pre vent any misrepresentation on the part of others, that I have felt it my duty to say thus much on this subject. " I am, respectfully, " Your most ob't servant, " Millard Fillmore. "W. Mills, Esq., Chairman, &c.'' This manly refusal to bind himself by any pledges, as to his future course as a legislator, does honor to the independence of his character. Mr. Fillmore was in favor of the right of petition, and' all his natural sympathies were opposed to hu man slavery; but he was aware that the relations of the national government to that institution are not to be deter mined by the sympathies of the human heart His letter impUes that the subject demanded inquiry, thought, anS deliberation; and he firmly asserts his right, when called to investigate it in a legislative capacity, to be governed by such views as mature investigation should lead him to adopt Another subject which was brought to the attention of the twenty-fifth Congress, deserves mention for the leading part THE 8TEAMEE CAadLtSSl. 51 which Mr. FiUmore took in the proceedings, and the Ulustra- tion they afford of his prompt and ardent patriotism. In 1837, during the insurrection in Canada, known as' "the Patriot War," a steamer called the CaroUne, and owned by a Mr. WeUsj of Buffalo, was employed on the Niagara river in the transportation of freight and passengers. On the morning of the 29th of December, the CaroUne left Buffalo, and pro ceeded down the river, running near the shore on the Ameri can side, within the territorial limits of the United States. She touched at Black Rock, and ran up the American flag, but had hardly left the harbor of that village when a voUey of musketry was discharged at her from the Canada shore. • No injury was done, however, and the Caroline continued her course down the river, without further molestation. On reaching Navy Island, she landed her passengers and freight, and in the course of the afternoon made two or three trips between Navy Island and Sohlosser, on the American side. At six o'clock in the evening, she was made fast with chains to the dock at Schlosser, and besides the crew, consisting of ten men, twenty-three other persons, who were unable to pro cure lodgings at the tavern, took up their quarters on board for the night. They had all retired to rest except those who were stationed to watch, when, about midnight, the captain was informed that several boats filled with men were making their way through the darkness, and approaching the Caro line. An alarm was given, but before the sleepers could reach the deck, the steamer was boarded by seventy or eighty armed men. With oaths and imprecations they commenced an at tack upon the defenseless crew, who, being unarmed, could offer no resistance, and fled to escape slaughter. One man was shot through the head, two were severely, and several slightly wounded ; the steamer was cut loose from her dock, set on fire, towed into the current of the river, sent blazing into the rapids, and extinguished by the fearful plunge over 52 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. the mighty cataract. Beacon Ughts then appeared on the ' Canada shore ; and when the boats, still under the cover of the night, returned "from their dreadful errand, the loud and vociferous cheers with which they were greeted, came roUing through the darkness to the American shore. The next morning the captain of the CaroUne found that twelve of the thirty-three men who went on board the preceding evening were missing. It was believed that disabled by their wounds, they remained on the Caroline, and had been committed to a fate which fiUs the imagination with horror. It afterward appeared that this expedition for the destruc tion of the Caroline had been fitted out by Col. Allen McNab, then in command of twenty-five hundred British troops at Chippewa, on the opposite side of the river. Two or three years later, the responsibihty of the affair was assumed by the British government. As this act was an invasion of our territory, and an aflfront to our sovereignty, Mr. FiUmore felt, as every patriot ought to feel, that it was the duty of the government to make a prompt demand for satisfaction. Although the subject be longed to the executive department he thought it the duty of Congress to express its sense of the outrage, and accord ingly proposed and pressed repeated resolutions, caUing on the President to lay before the House such correspondence on the subject as had passed between the two governments. In order to insure greater promptitude, he made his proposition as an amendment to another resolution, which had come up for consideration in its order. Opposition being made, " Mr. Fillmore said he could not conceive how his propo sition could possibly tend to embarrass the action of the House upon the resolution offered by the committee on foreign affairs. It was certainly very easy for the President to dis tinguish between the different kinds of information sought for by the different propositions. He had tried every other way EXCTTEMENT ON THE FEONTIEE. 53 to bring his proposition before the House, and could not pre sent it in any form which would secure its immediate consider ation, excepting that in which it now stood. For if it were offered as an independent resolution, it would take its place behind all others now on the Speaker's table. Its great im portance would not permit him to expose it to such a risk, and he had, therefore, offered it in the form of an amendment to tlie original resolution of the committee on foreign affairs, in which shape he hoped it would pass. "As to the expression which he had used in relation to the disturbances of the Niagara frontier, that this country was on the eve of a war with Great Britain, perhaps it was too strong an expression. But certainly all the facts demonstrated that there was imminent danger of such a result. The citizens of the United States, whUe in the peaceful pursuit of their busi ness, had been attacked by an armed force from a foreign nation, and a portion of the militia of the country is even now ordered out to repel such hostiUty. " He weU knew that the spirit of the people on the United States side of that frontier would not permit them to stand tamely by, and witness such assaults. These were facts, vouched for by respectable citizens as true and authentic ; and he must ask if they were not such as to warrant the offering of such a proposition as he had moved. It makes no differ ence, he contended, whether one or one hundred miles of the territory of the United States has been invaded by the arms of a foreign nation ; the jurisdiction of this country is co-ex tensive with the utmost Umits of her territory. Even if the vessel which was attacked had been carrying munitions of war to the revolutionists on Navy Island, she was only Uable, he contended, to be attacked while within the British fines. As it was, he agreed with the gentieman from Massachusetts, (Mr. Adams,) that there was scarcely a paraUel to this act upon the pages of our history as a nation; and it was to sup pose an absolute impossibiUty, for a moment to imagine that the people on that frontier wUl ever submit to the occurrence of such acts without complaint and redress. It was, there fore, in any view, highly important that the House should obtain all possible information upon a subject so important" In urging a similar resolution on a subsequent occasion, Mr. FiUmore assigned as a reason, that the information might 54 BIOGEAPHT OF MILIAED FILLMOEE. be -important to the House, in ease it should become necessary to arm the frontier. During the second session of the next Congress, when the arrest and trial of McLeod had again called attention to the subject and renewed the excitement on the frontier, a resolution calling on the Executive for informa tion was again passed, at the instance of Mr. FUlmor^. It was responded to by the President, who communicated the correspondence between the Secretary of State and the British minister. This correspondence was referred to the committee on foreign affairs, who made a report which went beyond the particular case, and entered into a general incul pation of the British government. Jealous as Mr. FUlmore was of the honor of his country, his sense of justice led him to disapprove of the tone of that report, especially as he thought it had a tendency to inflame the excitement, which already ran too high, and endangered the peace of the country. In the course of his remarks, objecting to the printing of this report, Mr. FiUmore said : " But one thing, at aU events, should be borne in min J by all whose duty requires them to act on this subject here. There is a great state of excitement on that frontier, which might by possibility lead to an outbreak. My objection to the printing of the report was, that it was calculated to inflame the pubUc mind ; and I was governed in that vote by three reasons. In the first place, I did not wish that anything should be done here which might have a tendency to do in justice to the individual who is soon to be tried by the laws of the State of New York. I desire that the law should have its free action, that no excitement should be raised against' McLeod, which might prevent a fair and impartial ti-ial. In the second place, I do not desire that any action on the part of this {loijse should compromise or control the Executive of this nation in the negotiations now pending between the government of the United States and the government of Great Britain. I have all confidence in the incoming adminis tration. If this controversy can be amicably and honorably EEMAEKS IN CONGEESS. 55 settled between the two governments, I desire that it should. But there is a third and very strong reason in my mind against anything being done to exasperate the pubUc mind on the subject of war with Great Britain. It is this: for three or four years I have used all the exertions in my power to induce this administration, which is responsible to the country, to provide some means of defense on our Northern- frontier. But all my efforts were in vain. And yet the gentleman from South Carolina (Mr. Pickens) now tells us that the course to be pursued to avoid a war with Great Britain, is to stand up to her — to threaten her — to take a high stand; and that, he says, will avert a war.% I may have been mistaken in the meaning. I know that those were not his words. But I would submit to him that the best way to , avoid a war with Great Britain, is to show that we are pre pared to meet her, if there is to be war; because reasonable preparations for defense are better than gasconading. " Mr. Fillmore then alluded to the defenseless condition of the Northern frontier. He desired, and believed the whole country desired, that we should yield nothing to the demands of Great Britain, to which she was not fairly entitled. But, at the same time, he regarded it as rather the act of a mad man, to precipitate the country into a war before it was pre pared for it, than the act of a statesman. In his section of country, the people would yield nothing to Great Britain to which she was not justly entitled ; or they would yield it only with the last drop of -their blood. But he did not wish pre maturely .to be drawn into war; he did not wish to invite Great Britam to invade our defenseless coast. The true plan was to prepare for war if we had yet to come to it but to do nothing in the way of bragging. If it did come, geijtiemen would not find his (Mr. F.'s) people shrinking from their just share of responsibility. All they had — their property, their lives, everything — they were willing to devote, if need be, to the service and honor of their country. But, was it not the part of wisdom and prudence, before we made a declaration of war, to prepare for it? This was all he desired; and if this report was calculated to stir up a war feeling, without corre sponding preparation being made to meet the consequences, he, for one, was opposed to jt He did not wish the country to be disgraced by defeat when she must go to war, he 66 BIOGEAPHT OF KIHAED FILLMOEE. desired to see her prepared for it; he desired to see her placed in a situation which would enable her to bid defiance to the power of any government on earth." This extract evinces the same combination of patriotism and couras'e, with moderation and wisdom, which afterward dis cs ' ' tinguished the foreig'n policy of his admirable administration. Another subject in which Mr. Fillmore felt deep interest^ was connected with the organization of the House of Re presentatives, at the opening of the twenty-sixth Congress. In accordance witH the usual custom, the clerk of the last House proceeded to call the roll. When he reached New Jersey, which was entitled to six members, he called the name of one, and said there were five others, who Ukewise had cer tificates of election from the governor of the State, but that he had been furnished with papers questioning the vaUdity of their election, and therefore declined to call their names until he should know the pleasure of the House. If the political parties in ^he house had not been pretty equally balanced, a circumstance of this kind would have occasioned no difficulty or delay. The certificates of the governor, authenticated bv the seal of the State, would have been received without hesi tation as prima facie evidence of election; the members would have been sworn; and if, after the organization, their seats had been contested by other claimants, the subject would have been referred to a committee for investio-ation, prepaittory to the final decision of the House. But in this case, parties were so nearly balanced that the organization would be given to the Whig-s or Democrats, accord ing, as the claimants holding the certificates of the governor were admitted or rejected. The Democrats, therefore, con tended that it was the duty of the House to decide this ques tion before proceeding to elect a Speaker, while the Whigs, on the contrary, claimed that certificates of the governor should be regarded, as conclusive, until the House was regularly THE NE"W JEE8ET ELECTION CASE. 57 organized. On the fourth day of the session, John Quincy Adams was elected temporary chairman, and two weeks were consUmed before the House was ready to commence balloting for a Speaker. The discussion in which all this time had been consumed, hinged on the question whether the New Jersey members who held the governor's certificates, should be per mitted to take their seats and participate in the organization of the House. Their places were lost (as was charged a day. - or two afterward in debate) in consequence of Henry A. Wise's lack in parliamentary skill in proposing an affirmative resolution for their admission, instead of a negative one for their rejection. The vote happened to be a tie, and the reso lution was lost. Had it been negative instead of affirmative, it would have been lost in the same manner, and by the faUure of a vote to reject them, the members would have been per mitted to take their seats. As soon as the Speaker had been chosen, the discussion of the New Jersey contested seats was resumed, and occupied the House so entirely, to the obstruc tion of aU regular business, that the standing committees were not announced tUl the end of December. Even then the case had not been decided, and indeed had scarcely begun to be investigated. The committee on elections, therefore, became one of the most important in the House, from the great inter est which attached to the New Jersey case, and the pervading excitement of the public mind. Mr. Fillmore was assigned a prominent place on that committee, and distinguished himself by the zeal and ability with which he supported the claim of the New Jersey members. But with a majority, both of the House and the committee, against him, it was not to have been expected that he would be successful in controlling a result which was determined on strictly party grounds. The investiga tion ran on until nearly the middle of March. Mr. Fillmore was prevented from reading a minority report, and, by an appeal from the decision of the Chair, who, in determining a point of 3* 58 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. order, had assigned him the floor, he was silenced whUe attempt ing to make a speech. Mr. FiUmore was justly indignant at treatment so unfair, and finding it impossible to gain a hearing in the House, he addressed a long and very elaborate letter to his constituents, in which he ably, and with great clearness, argued all the questions involved in ' the New Jersey casa The manner in which he was treated by the majority showed how formidable they considered his opposition. The abiUty and spirit he evinced in that celebrated controversy had a great influence in gaining for him the confidence of his party and giving him his important position in the next Congress, when the Whigs came into power. His immediate constituents tes tified their approbation of his course by bestowing on him at the next election the largest majority ever given in his con gressional district THB TWENTT-SEVENTH CONGEESS. 69 CHAPTER IV. the TWENTT-SEVENTH CONGRESS. The twenty-seventh Congress was one of the most memo rable that has ever assembled under our government No presidential election has ever excited a deeper interest — no electioneering campaign has ever been conducted with greater warmth and spirit — no political revolution recorded in our annals has ever been more complete, than that of 1840. This great movement was the consequence of wide-spread financial distress, which had pervaded the country for the two or three preceding years; Banks, aU over the country, had either broken down or suspended specie payments ; merchants and manufacturers were ruined; business was in a state of stag-na tion ; and the public mind had become deeply impressed with the idea that the general embarrassment and bankruptcy under which the country suffered, was due to poUtical causes. Whether justly or unjusUy, the party in power was held responsible for the deplorable condition of the country. That mighty uprising of the masses by which the administration of Mr. Van Buren was overthrown, not only elected a new Presi dent, but brought together a Congress entertaining political principles the reverse of those which had prevailed in the public councils during the remarkable period composed of the twelve preceding years. ¦* It is not qur province to review the controversies which were then conducted with so much vehemence, or to discuss the policy of either of the great parties of that interesting period. 60 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. At this distance of time, when the passions excited by hot debate have subsided, the issues involved do not seem invested with the all-absorbing importance they were then thought to possess. The sub-treasury, then a principal object of partisan assault has come to be universally regarded as wise and sal utary, none of the evils having followed which were predicted from its operation; a national bank, then regarded by one party as the great panacea for curing all th,e disorders of the -currency, is admitted to be as unnecessary as it is obsolete; while within the last few months we have seen a Democratic secretary of the treasury recommending a tariff which discrim inates for the advantage of American manufacturers, and a Democratic member of the United States Senate advocating a bUl to carry out the recommendation. It is a strong proof of Mr. FUlmore's sagacity, that during the very heat and fervor of those controversies, his views were substaptially those which the public opinion of the country has since en dorsed. True, he was a party man, and his opinions were^ colored by his poUtical associations; but it is an evidence of the clearness of his intellect that, so far as he differed from his party he leaned toward the views which the progress of opinion has shown to be correct We saw, in our last chap ter, that as early as 1837 he had ceased to attach any import ance to a United States Bank. We shall see, in the course of the present chapter, that while he was a tariff man, and the author of the celebrated tariff of 1842, his views of the protective policy were so moderate and rational, that few men of any poUtical party would be found to dissent from them at present The prominent position assigned to Mr. FUlmore in the twenty-seventh Congress, is a proof of the confidence inspired by his previous congressional career. No sooner did his party come into power, than they manifested their high appreciation of his wisdom by assigning him the most difficult and responsible CHAIRMAN OF WATS AND MEANS. 61 post in the national legislature. The political revolution which had just been achieved owed its success to the financial em barrassments of the country and the general prostration of business. Not only private but public credit had become impaired, the resources of the government being as inadequate to its wants as those of individuals. The annual revenues had sunk to thirteen mUlions; the annual expenditures had gone np to thirty-seven millions; and the government was largely in debt As financial difficulties had brought the new admin- istration into power, it was its chief duty to devise financial remedies. The country looked to it for the restoration of con fidence, the revival of credit,' the recovery of business from its prostration, and the extrication of the national treasury from impending bankruptcy. The highest mark of confidence which the Whig party could at that time have bestowed on any mem ber of Congress, was to make him chairman of the committee of ways and means. From the beginning of the government all revenue bills have originated in the House of Representa tives, and the labor of maturing such biUs devolves on the committee of ways and means. The chairman of that com mittee, besides being its most prominent and influential mem ber, is the organ through which it communicates with the House. He not only takes a leading part in devising measures and arranging their details, but is expected to explain them to the House, defend them against objections, and ward off the assaults of keen-sighted adversaries. These duties, at all times arduous, became doubly so when a pftrty newly elevated to power was about to inaugurate a new financial policy. That Millard FUlmore was placed in this responsible position shows that he must have given previous proofs of great capacity. The manner in which he acquitted himself in it, not only justified the confidence of his friends, but won for him laurels which any statesman might be proud to wear. When he retired from Congress his reputation was as wide as the limits 62 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. of the country. By general acclamation he was declared to be one of the ablest and most patriotic members of a party which boasted the possession of many great men. The course of our narrative takes us over ground which has been the battie-field of contending political parties. That the subject of this sketch belonged to one of those parties is im plied in the fact that he acted a prominent part in the legisla tion of the country. If we dweU at some length on those parts of his pubUc career by which he acquired distinction, it is not for the purpose of defending the politics of the past but to fulfill the task we have assumed, of laying before the reader a candid and impartial account of Mr. FiUmore's pubUc Ufe, and exhibiting the proofs he has given of eminent capacity for public affairs. If the poUtical history of the country extended back only twenty-five years, it could easily be made to appear that a protective tariff was a purely party measure. But when we go beyond that period, and take in the whole history of the government, it will be seen that the principle of protection is no more a Whig than it is a Democratic doctrine. AU our Presidents, down to John Quincy Adams, have publicly recom mended protection ; and even Jackson himself, previous to his elevation to the presidency, showed himself as strong a pro tectionist as there was in the country. These facts are men tioned, not as arguments either for or against protection, but to prove that Mr. Fillmore's identification with that poUcy in 1842, does not necessarily identify him now with any particu lar party of our past politics. When Mr. Clay named that poUcy the American system, he disclosed the motive for its adoption, which no doubt acted powerfully on his own mind and on those of many other patriotic men. It was thought that to protect American industry would foster an American spirit and cultivate a deeper feeling of nationality. Whatever may be thought of the means, the motive was truly patriotic. The fires of American feeUng which have recently burst forth GEN. Jackson's tariff lettbe. 63 with so much splendor, have always dimly smouldered beneath the ashes of the old poUtical parties. Desire for a distinctive American nationality is a sentiment which has often sought expression in the politics of the country, and nowhere can we trace it more legibly than in the history of opinion on the sub ject of a protective tariff. We will make one or two qijotations in illustration of this point and prefer to draw them from Dem ocratic sources. The following is an extract from a letter of Gen. Jackson to Dr. L. H. Coleman, of North Carolina, dated Washington, August 26th, 1824: «««« universal sentiment of the Whig party, it had been settled, for a long period in advance of the national con vention, that Henry Clay would be the candidate for the first office. This eloquent and patriotic statesman was no doubt the private choice of a majority of his party in 1840; but the fact that he had been beaten, in 1832, by General Jackson, on the bank issue, rendered it inexpedient both in his own estimation and that of his friends, that he should be again brought forward until the prospects should preponderate pretty, strongly in favor of his success. Many of his friends supposed this time had arrived in 1840, and felt great dis satisfaction when they were over-ruled by the majority of the convention, who were of the opinion that General Har rison was a more available candidate. No man in the United States had so many personal friends as Mr. Clay, and his vigorous opposition to the administration of John Tyler, re moved all doubt of his availability in 1844 — there never having been any of his pre-eminent fitness. The Whigs of New York, proud of Mr. FiUmore's talents and standing, desired to see his name on the same ticket with Mr. Clay's, and determined to present it to the national 80 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLSTOEE. convention. In October, 1843, the editor of the New York Tribune made the foUowing expression of opinion: "I have just returned from a four weeks ramble at the West, and have • some comments to make in due season, on events and occur rences in my absence. For the present however, I must be content with a remark on a single point — the Vice-presidency. WhUe I believe the selection of the Whig candidate should be left as neaWy as may be, to the unbiassed and unembarrassed choice of a national convention, and, therefore, do not cal-e to engage in any newspaper discussion on the subject, I shall avoid misapprehension by stating that my own first chrace haS long been Millard FUlmore." This preference was JFuUy shared by the Whigs of New York. The Whig national convention met at Baltimore on the first of May, 1844. Hon. Ambrose Spencer, of New York, was chosen president, and twenty-six vice-presidents and six secre taries if ere appointed. As soon as the organization was com pleted, Henry Clay was nominated by acclataation^ as the Whig candidate for the Presidency. The convention merely ratified a iiomination that had been previously settled by the people. Respecting the candidate for Vice-president there was con siderable difference of opinion, and a choice was not effected untU the convention had balloted three times. John Davis^ of Massachusetts, was supported by the delegates from the Eastern States; Mr. FiUmore by those from the State of Neff York, and some of the Western Staties; Theodore Frelinghuy- sen by those from New Jersey, and other States. On the third ballot, Mr. FreHnghuysen received a majority of the votes, and was declared nominated. The author of the " Life and Times of SUas Wright," al though a Democrat, in describing the proceedings of this convention, speaks of the Whig candidates for Vice-president in the foMowirlg handsome terms: CANDIDATE FOR GOVEENOB. 81 " It is remarkable that a great number, snd we believe a majority of the men who have most attracted public attention and most influenced pubUc opinion in the State of New York, and indeed in several of the other States, are self-made men, who have risen to distinction by their personal merit and their own individual efforts, without the aid of wealth or influential connections. This is eminentiy the case with Mr. FiUmore. We beUeve he did not come to the bar very early in life. At any rate, before he had practiced law a sufficient lenjfth of time to distinguish himself in his profession, he was elected to the Assembly of this State from the county of Erie. He had not been long in pubUc Ufe when he was elected a member of Congress from the district that included the county in which he resided. In Congress, by his industry, talents, and great moderation and prudence, he soon acquired a powerful and commanding influence ; and during the last Congress, of which he was a member, he was chairman of the committee of ways and means, a poation the most honorable and iiesponsible of any in the House of Representatives. In that situation he discharged so well and so ably his duties, that when he left tiiat body, perhaps no member of it held a higher standing in the house or the nation than he. Mr. Frelinghuysen, however, had been a senator of the United States; he was the favorite of the Whigs in New Jersey, and the party were desirous of strengthening themselves in that State ; besides, he was a man of respectable talents, great erudition, and highly distinguished for purity of character, fw piety, and aU the privafe and social virtues." As soon as the result of the national convention became known, there was a general expression of opinion among the Wh^ of New York, in favor of making Mr. Fillmore their candidate for Governor. It was contrary to his wishes to run for that office, and he, addressed a letter to the editor of the Albany Evening Journal, asagning the reasons why he did not wish his name to be used. We copy his letter. "New York, May 16th, 1844. "Thdrlow Weed, Esq. — My Dear Sir — Being here in at tendance upon the Supreme Court, my attention has been 4* 82 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. called to an article in your paper of the 8th instant, and to some extracts from other journals in yours since that time, in which my name is mentioned as a candidate for nomination to the gubernatorial office in this State. You do me the justice to say that ' I have never desired the office of Governor, though I admit the right of the people to the services of a pubUc man in any station they may think proper to assign hinn.' My maxim has always been that individuals have no claim upon the public for official favors, but that the public has a right to the service of any and all of its citizens. This right of the public, however, must in some measure be quaUfied by the fitness and abUity of the person whose services may be de manded for the station designed, and the propriety of his ac cepting the trust can only be properly determined when all his relations, social and poUtical, are taken into the account. Of the former, I am ready to concede that the pubUc must be the proper and only judge. In regard to the latter, the indi vidual himself has a right to be consulted. These notices of the public press are from such sources, and so flattering, as to leave no doubt either of the sincerity or friendship of the authors. And the office itself, in my estimation, is second in point of dignity, honor and responsibility only to that of President of the United States. When we reflect that it has been held by a Jay, a Tompkins, and a CUnton, who in the discharge of its various and responsible duties acquired a fame- that has-cpnnected them with the history of our countrj', and rendered th'eir names immortal, aU must agree that its honors are sufficient to satisfy the most lofty ambition. For myself I can truly say that they are more than I ever aspired to. "Believing, as I now do, that whoever shsdl receive the nomination of the Whig convention for that distinguished station, wiU be elected, it is not from any apprehension of defeat that I am disposed to decUne its honors. But for reasons partly of\ a public, and partiy of a private character, I have invariably expressed an unwUUngness to become a candi date for that nomination. This has been long known to most of my intimate friends, and to few better than to yourself. But a sense of delicacy, which aU must appreciate, rendered me reluctant to make a more public declaration of my wishes on this subject at this time. It also occurred to me that some individuals, acting under a mistaken sense of my real motives. LETTER TO THUELO^W ¦WEED. 83 might be led to reproach me with being influenced in my course in this matter by the results of the Baltimore conven tion. But when I saw from the pubUo journals that many of my friends were committing themselves on this subject, and reflecting that no man from any apprehension of subjecting himself to unmerited censure, had a right to shrink from the performance of any duty, I felt that the candor and frankness due to my poUtical friends would not suffer me longer to per mit them to remain in doubt as to my wishes on this subject. " Permit me then to say that I do not desire to be con sidered as a candidate for that office. So far as my reasons for this determination are founded upon private considerations, it would be alike indeUcate and obtrusive to present them to the pubUc. But if these could -be removed or overcome, there are others of a more public character that should, it appears to me, be equally conclusive. . "Ih the first place, 1 greatly distrust my own abUity to discharge the varied and compUcated duties of that high sta tion m a manner either creditable to myself or satisfactory to the public. For the last twelve years my attention has been mostiy withdrawn from questions affecting State policy, and directed to national affairs. My chief experience in public matters has been in the national councUs, and to my labors there I am mainly indebted for whatever reputation I may enjoy as a public man. It appears to me that the present pecuUarly trying emei^encies in the great interests of the State require a man for the executive chair of eminent abiUty, long tried experience, and a greater share of public confidence than I can hope to possess. I can not but feel that many who have been mentioned are more deserving of that honor, and better able to discharge those high trusts, than myself. I recognize in each " an elder and a better soldier." " But secondly, it is kno^wn to all that I have recently been a candidate for nomination to the Vice-presidency. I had previously considered my poUtical career as ended for the present, if not closed forever. Never at all sanguine of suc cess, I yielded a reluctant assent to the presentation of my name for that office. Grateful as I am, and ever shall be, for the generous devotion of my friends, I felt no disappoint ment in the result and unite most cordiaUy with my Whig 84 BIOGEAPHT OF MlLLAfiD FILLMOEE. brethren in sustaining the excellent nominations of that con vention. But a candidate is now to be selected from the Whig party of this State for the gubernatorial office. Such person must be taken from among my political associates, and I feel that I owe too much to thein to suffer my name to come in competition with theirs for this distinguished honor. To per mit it would wear the semblance of ingratitude, or an over weening ambition for political preferment I know that I feel neither, and I can perceive no reason why I should subject myself to the imputation. This alone, if there were no other reasons, would be to iny mind an insuperable objection. " But nevertheless, wMle I thus decUne to be considered a candidate for nomination, it is due to myself to express the grateful emotions of my heart to those friends who have so kindly intimated a preference for me for that office. It implies a confidence on their part which it has been the height of my ambition to acquire; and I shaU cherish the recollection of it throtigh life. BeUeve me, also, when I say that I am not insensible to the deep obUgations which I atn under to the people of this, my native State; and more especially to those in the western part of it who have sustained me with such generous devotion and unwavering fidelity through many years of arduous pubUc Service. They could not caU upon me for a!ny sacrifice, merely persorial to myself, that I should not feel bound to make. I owe them a debt of gratitude which I never expect to be able to discharge. But the Whig party of this State now presents an array of talent and of weU tried political and moral integrity not exceUed by that of any other State in tbe Union. Trom this distingijished host it can not be difficult to select a suitable candidate for the office of Governor — one who is capable, faithful, true to the cause and the country, and who wUl call out the enthusiastic support of the whole Whig party. To such a candidate I pledge in advance my most hearty and zealous support Let us add his nanie to those of Clky and FreUnghuysen, and our success is certain. "But while I thus withdraw from competition for the honors, be assured that I do not shrink from the labors or responsi bilities of this great contest We have a work to perform in this State 'Which caUs for the united effort and untiring exer tion of every true Whig. Here the great battle is to be *61inDIDATE, F0& GOVERNOR. 85 fd'i^ht For biyself I ata enUsted for the waf. Wherever I can be of 'most service, there I am wUling to go; I seek no dis tinction but such as may be acquired by a faithful laborer in a good cause. I ask no reward but such as results to all from a good government well administered ; and I desire no higher gratification than to witness the well merited honors with which victory wiU crown my numerous Whig friends. " I am truly yours, "Millard Fillmore." Whatever force there day have been in the reasons assigned in this letter, the current of Whig feeling was running too strongly in favor of Mr. Fillmore's nomination for Governor, to be arrested by any expression of his wishes. Whate^-er might be the merits of other distinguished 'Whigs, the piarty was united on him, and the movement was so spontaneous, that it' was feared an atitempt to make any other nomination would distract and eml)arrass the party. The unanimous voice of the 'Whig press insisted that 'it was the duty of Mr. Fillmore to yield his private incUnations, and of the party to nominate him with the same unanimity they would have done had he not publicly decUnied the 'honor. The 'Whig State convention met on the eleventh of Sep tember, and Hon. Francis Granger, formerly Postmaster General, was chosen president As soon as the organization was completed, a delegate from Onondaga county, after a few prefatory remarks, moved a resolution declaring Millard Fill more unanimously nothinated as the Whig candidate foi- Governor. The president having put the question, the reso lution was carried by acclamation, the convention and spec tators rising in a body and giving nine enthusiastic cheers. Thus the Whigs of New York, too impatient to testify their confidence in the man of their choice to await the formality of a Fallot, promptly made him their candidate with an enthusiasm so s{)ontaneous, a zeal so irrepressible, as to compel his 86 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. acceptance of the nomination. We copy two of the resolu tions which were unanimously adopted by the convention: "Resolved, That we announce to the people of this great commonwealth, with peculiar and triumphant satisfaction, the name of our candidate for the chief magistracy of the State — a nomination which we were caUed together not to suggest but to declare, as the previously expressed wUl of the people — a nomination which we have therefore made unanimously without a moment's delay, and without a thought of dissent — and that we rejoice in the opportunity thus to show a grateful people's high appreciation of the modest worth, the manly pubUc virtue, the spotless integrity and unchangeable fideUty of that eminent champion of Whig principles, the dauntless vindicator of the outraged popular suffrage in the case of the insulted 'BROAD seal' of New Jersey in 1840, the vaUant and victori ous leader of the patriotic'Whigs of the immortal twenty- seventh Congress in their long and trying warfare against corruption and despotism, the laborious author and eloquent defender of the Whig Tariff — Millard Fillmore. "Besolved, That in him, known to' the people by long and faithful service in the Legislature of the State and nation, we rejoice to present a true and worthy representative of Democratic Republican principles, born in the forest of the noble western region of our own State, trained among an industrious kindred to hardy toil and manual labor on the farm and in the manufactory — democratic in all his associations and sympathies — called early into honorable public service, and promoted to an unsought distinction by an intelligent con stituency, who learned his capacity by experience — free from the degrading and contaminating association of partisan man agers and ' spoilers ' — one who never sought to rob the people of the right to choose their own riders, but ever distinguished himself in contending for popular rights and constitutional liberty, and in securing to the American laborer his labor's just and high reward." It is a well known matter of history, that in the presidential campaign of 1844, the Whig party were disastrously beaten. They had entered the canvass with high and confident hopes LETTEE TO ME. OLAT. 87 of success, and deep and bitter was their disappointment, when they found that Henry > Clay, their great and cherished leader, was^ defeated by a majority of sixty-six electoral votes. Mr. Fillmore, of course, shared the defeat of his party. Peraon- aUy, his failure to be elected Governor of New York was a reUef, for he had not wanted the office. But he felt, with the whole 'Whig party, the sorest disappointment and chagrin that the most illustrious statesman in the country should have been vanquished in a contest before the people, by a man of the moderate pretensions of his Democratic competitor. Under the influence of these feeUngs, Mr. Fillmore wrote the following letter to Mr. Clay, in which he justly attributed his defeat in the State of New York to the Abolitionists and foreign CathoUcs : Buffalo, November 11th, 1844. "Mr Dear Sir: I have thought for three or four days that I would write you, but really I am unmanned. I have no courage or resolution. AU is gone. The last hope, which hung first upon the city of New York and then upon Virginia, is finally dissipated, and I see nothing but despair depicted on every countenance. " For myself I have no regrets. I was nominated much against my will, and though not insensible to the pride of suc cess, yet I feel a kind of relief at being defeated. But not so for you or for the nation. Every consideration of justice, every feeUng of gratitude conspired in the minds of honest men to insure your, election ; and though always doubtful of my own success, I could never doubt yours, till the painful conviction was forced upon me. " The AboUtionists and foreign CathoUcs have defeated us in this State. I will not trust myself td speak of the vUe hy pocrisy of the leadijig AboUtionists now. Doubtiess many acted honestly but ignorantly in what they did. But it is clear that Birney and his associates sold themselves to Locofocoism, and they wiU doubtless receive their reward. " Our opponents, by pointing to the Native Americans and to Mr. Frelinghuysen, drove the foreign Catholics from us and defeated us in thiis State. S$ BIOGEAPHT- OP MILLAED FILLMOEE. ¦"But it IS yain to look at the causes by which this infamoUB result has been produced. It is enough to say that all is gone, and I must confess that nothing has happened to shake toy confidence in our ability to sustain a free government so much as this. If with such issues and such candidates as the na tional contest presented, we can be beaten, what may we not expect? A cloud of gloom hangs over the future. May God save the country; for it is evident the people wUl not' Mr. Fillmore was not alone in supposing that its foreign population had deprived the country of the services of a states man pre-eminently fitted for its highest office, whose elevation to tlie presidency would have been a matter of just national pride; To show hbw widely this impression prevailed among inteUigent men, we make the foUowing quotations from some of the numerous letters addressed to Mr. Clay after the result of the election became known. The venerable Ambrose Spencer, formerly Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the State of New York, wrote to Mr. Clay as foUows, under the date of Albany, Nov. 21st, 1844: "You wUl perceive that the AboUtion vote lost you the election, as three-fourths o( them were firm Whigs, converted mto AboUtionists. The foreign vote also destroyed your elec tion, and there was yet another distinct cause. * * * * This untoward event has produced universal gloom, and has shaken public confidence to an unexpected extent Even many of those who voted for Polk, now that he is elected, deeply regret the result God only knows to what we are destined. One sentiment seems to prev-aU universally, that the naturaUzation laws must be altwed ; that they must be re pealed, and the door forever shut on the admission of foreigners to citizenship, or that they undergo a long probation. I am for the f<5rmer. " The Germans and the Irish are in the same category ; ti»e one who know not our language, and are as ignorant as the lazzaroni of Italy, can never understandingly exercise the fran chise; and the other, besides their ignorance, are naturaUy inclined to go with the loafers of our own population." POEEIGN ^OLTtlOAli XNFLTTENCE. 89 PhUip Hone, of Ne* York city, under date of Nov. 28th, 1844, writes: "But the especial object of my writing is to remove any unfavorable impressions (if such there be) from your mind aS to the miserable result here. The loss of New Yot-k was fatal to the cause of the Whigs, but I pray you, dear sir, to attri bute no part of this misfortune to a want of exertion on the part of your frieiids in the city of New York. Never before did they work so faithfully, and never, I fear, wUl they again j the man and the cause were equally dear to the noble Whigs, and every honorable exertion was made, every personal sacri-' fice submitted to, every liberal oblation poured Upon the altar of patriotic devotion; nine-tenths of our respectable citizens voted for Clay and Frelinghuysen — the merchants, the profes- y sional men, the mechanics ahd woAing men, all such as live by their skill and the labor of their honest hands, who have wives whom they cherish and chUdren whom they strive to educate and make good citizens — men who go to church on Sundays, respect the laws and love their country-^^uch men, to the number of twenty-six thousand three hundred and eighty-five-, i redeemed their pledge to God and the country; biit alasi the numerical strength ties not in those classes. Foreignets ~ who have 'no lot oi- inheritance' in the matter, have robbed us of our birth-right, the ' scepter has departed from Israel.' Ire land has re-conquered the country which England lost, but never suffer yourself to beUeve that a single trace of the name of Henry Clay is obliterated from the swelling hearts of the Whigs of Ne*- York." The following is extracted from a letter to Mr* Clay, written by John H. Westwood, dated Baltimore, Nov. 28th, 1844: " I well recollect in the family cifcle, while a boy, sitting around the domestic hearth, hearing my father reeoulit yout patriotic deeds. One sentence from a speech of yours, ' The colors that float iFrom the maSt-head should be the credentials of oiir seamen,' was indelibly fixed on my mmd. Then judge iny deep mortification and disappointment to filid the sailors' friend, the master-spirit of the late war, 'the noblest Roman of them all,' rejected by the American people, and such a man 90 BIOGEAPHT OP MILLAED FILLMOEE. as James K. Polk placed in the presidential chair. Did I say American people ? I recaU that expression, for two-thirds of the native freemen of the United States are your fast friends. " It was foreign influence aided by the Irish and Dutch vote that caused our defeat As a proof, in my native city alone, in the short space of two months there were over one thousand naturalized. Out of this number nine-tenths voted the Loco- foco ticket Thus men who could not speak our language were made citizens and became politicians too, who at the polls were the noisy revilers of your fair fame. Thus you have been well rewarded for the interest you ever took for the oppressed of other nations. Notwithstanding the ingratitude of the, Irish and German voters, if the AboUtionists of New York had done their duty, all would have been well." Mr. E. Pettigru, of Magnolia, North Carolina, wrote a letter to Mr. Clay on the occasion of his defeat, from which the fol lowing is an extract : " But on this subject I need say no more. It is aU plain to you, and my remarks are only to show how much I deplore the faUure of our forefathers, the patriots of the Revolution. But one word on the subject of naturalization. My opinion has been for forty years that there should 'be no citizens of the United States except those born within its limits. Let every foreigner be satisfied to enjoy aU the other privUeges that the State in which they chose to Uve thought proper to grant Had that been the law, we should not now be like men in a thunder squall waiting, with trembling anxiety for the next clap." Mr. C. L. L. Leary, of Baltimore, under the date of Nov. 14th, 1844, writes: "I console myself, too, (and to you it must be a source of unfailing gratulation,) that I find myself arrayed in this -contest on the same side with the enlightened intelligence, virtue, and patriotism of the Union, with the line of discrimination so broadly and vividly drawn, that 'the wayfaring man,' though a fool in 6ther matters, 'need not err therein.' Whatever partial triumphs we have won, have been achieved by honest American hearts, and with unstamed American hands; no levies EISE OF THE AMKEIOAN PAETT. 91 have been made upon the prisons and lazar-houses of Europe ; no Canadian mercenaries cj Hessian auxUiaries have been either pressed or purchased into our service ; you are the only choice of the great American party, standing upon a broad American platform, supported and dependent upon an Ameri can Constitution, as framed, understood, and construed by the patriot fathers of the repubUc. We are told in Holy Writ that ' The wicked walk on every side, when the vUest men are exalted;' and in this humiliating posture we now find American affairs. The very fountain of our political system, from whence all authority and power flow, is revoltingly corrupt. The bal lot-box is poisoned by gross ignorance and wanton perjury." Mr. Frelinghuysen, who was candidate for Vice-president on the same ticket with Mr. Clay, says to him in a letter -written from New York, Nov. 11th, 1844: " And then the foreign vote was tremendous. More than three thousand, it is confidentiy said, have been naturalized in this city alone since the first of October. It is an alarming fact, that this foreign vote has decided the great questions of American policy, and counteracted a nation's gratitude." We have made these numerous extracts for the purpose of showing how deep, pervading and wide-spread was the impres sion, among inteUigent men in all parts of the country, in 1844, that our foreign population had come to exert a very undue influence in American poUtics. They show that the feeUng out of which the present American party has sprung is no hasty im pulse, no sudden freak, no transient ebullition of passion, but a deeply seated conviction of the American mind, which has been growing and gathering strength for years. As it has not suddenly sprung up, so it wiU not rapidly disappear The quotations we have just made suggest the propriety of our gi-ving, in this connection, a sUght sketeh of the first rise of the American party as a distinct poUtical organizatioa In the year 1834, Professor Samuel B. Morse, the inventor of the electro-magnetic telegraph, a gentleman whose fame 92 BIOGEAPHT OF HILLAE0 FILLMOEE. wiU be as endnring as the records of science, was run as a candi date f&t ttiayot of New York eity, by a party ¦v^hich had just been brganized for the purpose of withstanding foreign mflu- ence in our elections.r He received nine thousand votes. An address had previously been issued, which temperately but ably set forth the dangers which threatened our institutions from the abusfe of the elective franchise, by the foreign popula- t'ibn of the country, the convenient instruments of papal priests and native demagogues. The truths presented in this address were so forcible that they produced a powerful impressi^ led to a distinctive American organization, and the nomination of a purely American ticket The vote polled in its favor seemed so indteatrve of future success, that it excited the apprehen- sions of the old parties, whose leaders then controlled the po litical press. They opened their batteries against the rising party, and by the power of the press and the efficiency of party discipUne, succeeded in repressing temporarily the outward expression of a sentiment whieh, though it might be checked, could not be extinguished. The mention of Professor Morse recalls an incident, which as it connects his name with that of Mr. FiUmore, we will briefly relate : ' When Professor Morse had perfected his electric telegraph and secured the patent its exhibition in Washington excited much attention. Mr. Fillmore, then chairman of the com mittee of ways and means, was particularly interested in the novel and extraordinary machinej and after making up the de tails of the annual civU appropriation bUl, he proposed ao amendment appropriating $30,000 for the construction of an electric telegraph from Washington to Baltimore. A distin guished member of the House, who was afterward Post master General, violently opposed the appropriation, and, in the excitement of the debate, denounced the invention as a worth less humbug. By the urgent and impressive representaticm? EISE OF THE AMEEICAN PAKTT. 98 of Mr. Fillmore the amendment was carried, when the gen tleman referred to, as a mode of expressing his derisicm, rose in his place and proposed as a further amendment, an appropriation of sixty thousand doUars to carry on experiments in animal ms^etism, as a doubly important and much more ra tional object But in spite of sneers and jibes, Mr. FUlmore carried his point and this great American invention was ena bled to give a practical demonstration of its utUity. Although the American party of 1834 did not maintain its organization, the occurrences of subsequent years deepened the conviction of- its necessity. Not only did the same corrupt in fluences which it had tried to stem continue to prevaU in the elec tions, but the papal hierarchy seemed to have made a conquest < of the Governor of New York. In 1 840, Gov. Seward proposed to the Legislature of the State* to innovate upon its school sys tem, by setting apart a portion of its common school fund fpr the support of sectarian schools, under the control of the Catholic church. This project, warmly advocated by Bishop Hughesy was again obtruded on the New York Legislature by Gov. Seward in 1841, and pressed with aU the arguments that could be derised in its fiavor by an artful and ingenious mindl Events like these, combined with the constantly increasing in solence of foreign voters and office-seekers, deepened the re pugnance of American citizens, and led to a revival of the American party as a distinct poUtical organization. The for eign residents in the large cities bad not only beeome numer ous, bnt they exert«d a la-ge influence in thjS elections in proportion to their numbers. They held the balance of pow^r between the two«ld parties, and were conscious that they could turn the scale whichever way they pleased. Presumii^ on their strength, they demanded and received a large share of the less important offices, to the exclusion of native born cit izens. The services for which they were thus rewarded conr sisted in thronging caucuses and primary meetings, and so 94 BIOGEAPHT OP MILLAED FILLMOEE. degrading then- character that self-respecting men would take no part in managing the machinery by which nominations were controUed; and in hanging about the polls and bullying qniet native citizens who went to deposit their votes. These abuses led to the re-organization of the American party in 1843. A declaration of principles was pubUshed, and in the city of New York a fuU municipal ticket was nominated which polled a very considerable vote. Boston, Philadelpliia, St Louis, New Orieans, and other cities followed the patriotic example, and each of them elected either the whole or a part of the American ticket. In the- municipal election in New York city in April, 1844, the Native American party nominated James Harper, of the respectable publishing firm of Harper & Broth ers, as their candidate for mayor, and elected him by a ma jority of between four and five thousand. They also elected a majority of the aldermen and assistant aldermen of the city. The American feeUng which gave these powerful evidences of its strength in nearly all our large cities in 1844, was again smothered, as it had been ten years before. True, it was much deeper and more general than it had been in 1834, but be sides the discipline of political parties which was put in requi sition to crush it, it encountered obstacles in the absorbing top ics which then engrossed public attention. The next yearTexas was annexed to the United States. Then followed the war with Mexico, large acquisitions of new territory, the discovery of the rich gold mines of California, and the exciting contro versies consequeofc on the appUcation of that rapidly matured State for admission into the federal union. But no sooner had the pubUo mind time to settle into tranquiUity after the excite ment which attended the adoption of the compromise of 1850, than American sentiments again found expression, and asserted their power as they had never done before. As, in 1844, they had shown themselves much more powerful than in 1834, so, in 1 854, all preceding exhibitions of American feeling seemed THE AMEEIOAN PAETT. 95 but as the drops which precede a copious and refreshing shower. Although by the repeal of the Jdissouri compromise, the country has been afflicted with another distracting slavery agitation, even that has been unable to arrest or materially re tard the progress of Americanism, and however the movement may be obstructed or opposed, it wUl triumph over aU obsta cles, because it is founded in the deepest feeUngs of mUlions of patriotic hearts. 96 BIOGEAPHT OF Mffit-ABP PII^MOEE. CHAPTER VL ELECTED comptroller OF NEW TORK. In the fall of 1847, Mr. FiUmore was elected ComptroDer of the State of New York, and entered on the duties of the office on the first of the following January. This office is one of great importance, the Comptroller being the chief financial officer of thfe State, and entrusted with the management of all its various funds. These, in the State of New York, are numerous and large, some half dozen distinct ^nd separate funds being enu merated, and their condition regularly described, in the annual reports required of the ComptroUer. To say nothing of the school funds which amount to between two and three milUons of dollars, or the United States deposit fund, amounting to between four and five milUons, or the literature fund, or the trust funds, the magnificent and almost gigantic system of public works which are the property of the State, would alone require that its principal financial officer should be a man of great business capacity, experience and skiU. At the time Mr. FiUmore held the office, in addition to his other multifarious duties, the Comp troller was superintendent of the hank department in the wealthiest and the most commercial State in the Union, as weU as a leading member of the Canal Board. As the citizens of other States have probably a very inadequate conception of the importance of this office, and the high order of abUity requisite for the successful discharge of its duties, it may not be amiss to copy the following paragraphs which appeared in the Albany Argus the year previous to Mr. FiUmore's election as Comp- COMPTSOLLEESHIP OF NEW YOEK, 97 troUer. They are quoted from an article written by an able and highly intelligent correspondent of that paper: "There is at this day no officer of the State whose duties and powers are so diversified, so extensive, and so complicated, as those of the Comptroller ; nor is there any who is placed in a more commanding position for exercising a political influence. From a simple auditor of accounts, and a watch upon the treas ury, he has sprung up into an officer of the first eminence in the administration ; supplanting by degrees some departments which were once in equal, if not higher regard, as auxiUarie's and advisers of the executive power. He is the one-man of the government. He is not simply an officer, but a bundle of officers. There is hardly a branch of the administration of which he is not a prominent member ; so prominent, in some cases, that the affairs of that branch can not be conducted with out his actual presence, although personally he may be a mi nority of those having it in charge. He is the chief of the finances; the superintendent of banks; and the virtual quo rum of the commissioners of the canal fund, with all the povver which such a position gives him in the Canal Board. WhUe other State departments have no more than maintained their original sphere and authority, or have suffered material dimin ution, particularly of influence, the office of ComptroUer hag been a favorite of the Legislature, and the chief object of itj confidence, entrusted with high i£ not extraordinarj' powers of government An examination of the statutes will show that every year adds to its duties, untU they have become, by contin ual aggregation, a complicated mass, beyond the power of performance by any one man, and almost beyond the reach of his thorough and inteUigent supervision." ********* "To form an adequate idea of the mass of duty he has in charge, it is necessary not only to survey tbe summary contained in the revised code of our laws, but to trace out the statutes 5 98 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. from year to year ; to review the reports of his office ; and to follow him and his numerous assistants in the actual discharge of their various labors in the financial, banking, and tax bu reaux of his department But it is inconsistent with the de signed brevity of these papers to enter into the detaUs which alone can convey a suitable notion of the magnitude and respon sibihty of his trust and influence. As the department is now organized, it is overgrown and cumbersome ; and to perform with thorough intelligence and conscientiousness, without error or delay, all its requisite offices of supervision and of action, requires the sight of Argus, with his hundred eyes, auJ the activity of Briareus, with his hundred hands." Mr. FiUmore's talents peculiarly fitted him for the able discharge of the duties of this office — duties even more import ant than those of the Governor of the State, and more compli cated than any which devolve on the secretary of the national treasury. He possesses in a very high degree the combina tion of qualities which constitute eminent administrative ability. A native cast of mind which prefers business to show, love of labor, fondness for method, a comprehensive mental grasp united to great capacity for details, energy, inventiveness — these are qualities for which Mr. Fillmore is distinguished, and which form the solid basis on which his reputation as an executive officer has been reared. In mentioning inventiveness as one of his mental characteristios, we must not be understood to mean that light pla^ of fancy which supplies imageiy to the poet ; for Mr. FiUmore's turn of thought is too earnest anc manly to feel much pleasure in frivolous ornaments. He is a greater master of the figures of arithmetic than of the figures of rhetoric ; but the mathematician may be original as well as the orator, although it requires more skUl to discern and appreciate the originality of the former than of the latter. It is the business of the statesman to deal with grave and important in terests, and if he is a man of great resources he shows it rather compteollee's eepoet. 99 by proposing wise measures which will abide the test of time, than by making ingenious speeches that die with the breath that utters them. When Hamilton devised the financial sys tem by which the country was extiicated from its difficulties and retrieved its ruined credit he was as much entitled to the praise of originality as was John Randolph in any of thoje ec centricities of thought which rendered his speeches so entertain ing. The kind of inventiveness by which a statesman becomes fertile in resources, is not that which kindles into brilUant coruscations in popular oratory, but that which enables him to bring to great exigencies the measures best adapted to meet them. In 1842, the national finances were in a most deplor able condition. MUlard Fillmore was made chairman of the committee of ways and means, and when he had matured his measures of reUef, credit revived and the country entered on a new career of prosperity. In 1850, sectional controversies ran so high as to imperil the existence of the Union; Millard Fill more became President of the United States, and harmony and tranquilUty were perfectly restored. These remarks in relation to the originaUty of Mr. FUlmore's mind have been suggested by his report as ComptroUer of New York. The merits one would expect to find in such a docu ment are a clear exhibit of the financial condition of the com monwealth and of the state of its various funds, accompanied, perhaps, by suggestions relative to their management Not only did Mr. FUlmore's report possess these merits ; not only did it display clear method, lucid statement and happy sug gestions, but it proposed a plan for improving the banking system of the State, which embodied the happiest solution that has ever been offered of the great problem of devising a circu lating medium which should combine the lightness and conve nience of paper with the security of gold and silver. We quote from his report all that he said on tHe subject of banks, asking particular attention to the part which recommends 100 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. United States stocks as a basis of banking. The reader wiH be struck with the comprehensiveness of view which so readily combines a measure of State policy with a method for facUitat- ing the collection of the national revenues. Tbe plan pro posed by Mr. FiUmore would unite the advantages claimed for both^ a United States Bank and the sub-treasury system, with out the dangers and inconveniences of either : " In order to determine this question properly, several thmgs are to be taken into consideration, and the first is, what is the duty of the State in reference to banking? It wouki, doubt less, be desirable to create banks which should be able to dis charge every obligation, not only to the bill-holder, but to the depositors, and all others to whom it should incur any liabUity. But this is impossible. The safety fund, which was intended to provide such security, would have been ample to redeem all the circulation of the banks which have failed, but it has been exhausted in paying depositors and other creditors of the insolvent banks, and is now mortgaged for all it will probably produce for eighteen years to come. Thus by attempting more than could be accomplished, the Legislature failed to secure the bUl-holder, which was in its power, and, for tbe remaining eighteen years that some of these charters have to run, the safety fund yields him no security. It is apparent, , then, that securit}' for all liabiUiies can not be provided, and the State is under no more obligation to attempt this impossi bility than it would be the equally absurd one of making every merchant capable of meeting all the obligations he should incur. " It is humbly conceived the duty of the State in this case begins and ends with furnishing a good and safe currency to the people. To furnish this currency, so far as it consists of paper or credit is an exclusive privUege granted by the State, and the State should take care that in granting it the people are secured from imposition and loss. Any man may receive deposits, or discount a note, or loan money, or draw a biU of exchange. " These, it is admitted, are banking operations. But they are open to all. Those who engage in them enjoy no exclu sive privilege. But not so with those who are authorized to BAN:SS and BANKmG. 101 issue bank notes to circulate as money. This is a banking op eration confined to the few. It is a prerogative enjo)'ed exclu sively by the money kings of the country, and they should not enjoy it without giving the most ample security. This duty is justly imposed for the privilege which is granted. "Assuming, then, that the great object of legislation on this subject is to provide a sound currency by giving ample security to the bill-holder, the question is, how can this best be accom plished ? It must be borne in mind that safety fund banks derive much of their credit from the individuals who were in corporated. By granting a special charter in each case, the Legislature had it in its power in some measure to control this matter. " But there was an attendant evil that in the opinion of many outweighed the good. The practice of granting exclusive priv ileges to particular individuals invited competition for these legislative favors. They were soon regarded as part of the spoils belonging to the victorious party, and were dealt out as rewards for partisan services. " This practice became so shameless and corrupt that it could be endured no longer, and in 1838 the legislature sought a remedy in the general banking law. This was the origin of the free bank system. Since that time no safety fund bank has been chartered; and in 1846 the people set their seal of reprobation upon this practice of granting special charters for banks, by providing in the new constitution that 'the Legisla ture should have no power to pass any act granting any special charter for banking purposes, but that corporations or associa tions might be formed for such purposes under general laws.' " Would it be safe, then, to provide by general law that voluntary associations or incorporations might be formed any where and by any persons for banking? The ComptroUer thinks not. Suppose they were required to pay in all their capital, and the most satisfactory proof should be required of this fact Even this is no security to the bUl-holder. The capital paid in is left in the custody of those who pay it They can withdraw it at pleasure. It would only be necessary for those who ¦wished to practice a fraud upon the credulity of the community, and reap a golden harvest to associate together and form a bank, pay in a large capital, appoint one of their associates president, and another cashier, to take charge of it; 102 BIOGEAPHT OP MILLAED FILLMOEE. prove to this department these facts, and obtain biUs for circu lation to an equal amount, and then pay them out for property easily transported — take their capital and leave for California, and in one week would be beyond the reach of process or the power of coercion. " But it has been suggested that each bank might be re quired to deposit a certain amount say ten per cent., in the treasury, to constitute a fund for the redemption of its bUls. So far as this deposit goes it may be safe. It is on the princi ple of the free bank system. But if the deposit be intended for the redemption of the bank only which makes the deposit it is wholly inadequate. It is no more than the banks under the old safety fund system paid to a general fund. Their charters had twenty years to run. They paid half of one per cent, per annum, making in all ten per cent To say that one dollar is deposited as a security for the redemption of ten, is a mockery. '' But it may be said that the bills constitute a common fund for the redemption of the bills of the insolvent banks only. Then, as many which are solvent wUl not want it there wUl be enough to redeem all the bUls of those which shall prove insolvent. This is doubted. This fund, instead of being sufficient to redeem the notes of all insolvent banks, would probably for a time give just credit enough to the fraudulent associations which would be formed, to enable them to get their notes in circulation, and then by withdrawing their capi tal the more effectually defraud the community. It is believed to be wholly inadequate for the object intended. " The Comptroller beUeves that the safest way to make a sound paper currency, is to have at all times ample security for its. redemption in the possession of the State. In order to make this security ample, it should be not only sufficient in amount but should be of such a nature that it may be readily converted into cash without loss. It is not enough that the security be ultimately good or collectable ; delay in redeeming the circulation causes it to depreciate, and is almost as fatal to the poor man who can not wait, as ultimate insolvency. He becomes at once the victim of the broker. "A bond and mortgage may be good — that is, the whole amount secured by them may be collectable. But the bill- holder can not wait for this. They must be convertible into BANKING. 103 cash by sale, and if for any reason this can not be promptly done, they are not of that kind of security which should be required. All the experience of this department shows that bonds and mortgages are not the best security for this purpose, and while better security can be had, it is deeply to be regret ted that they were ever received. The apprehension that there may be a defect of title, that the lands mortgaged may have been appraised too high, or that there may be some legal. defense to a suit of foreclosure, all conspire to depreciate their value in the estimation of purchasers, when offered for sale at auction .on the failure of a bank. " Capitalists are cautious about purchasing, and the conse quence is that they have sometimes sold for less than twenty per cent on the amount received by them, and the average amount for which all have been sold, for the last ten years, is only thirty-seven and seventy-one hundredths per cent., while tbe average amount for which the five per cent stocks of this State have sold is ninety-two eighty-six one-hundredths per cent, or ninety-two doUars and eighty-six one-hundredths for every hundred dollars of stock. This shows that a six per cent, stock, such as is now required, would doubtless have sold at par, and the biU-holder would have received dollar for dol lar for the circulation. " Should the country remain at peace, it can not be doubted that the stocks of the LTnited States wiU be a safe and adequate security. The Comptroller would therefore recommend that the law be so changed as to exclude bonds and mortgages from all free banks which shaU herea!fter commence business, and to prevent the taking of any more from those now in op eration, and to require that ten per cent per annum of those now held as security be withdrawn, and their places supplied by stocks of this State, or of the United States. If this re commendation be adopted, at the end of ten years the whole security will be equal to a six per cent, stock of this State or of the United States, which it is presumed wiU be ample se curity for the redemption of all bills in circulation. " Could this system of banking be generally adopted in the several States, it can hardly be doubted it would prove highly beneficial. It would create a demand for their own State stocks. The interest paid upon them would be paid to their own citizens. Every man who held a bank note, secured by 104 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. such stock, would have a direct interest in maintaining inWo- late the credit of the Stated The blasting cry of repudiation would never again be heard, and the plighted faith of the State would be as sacred as national honor; and lastly, it would give them a sound and uniform currency. "If, then, in addition to this, Congress would authorize such notes as were secured by stocks of the United States to be received for public dues to the national treasury, this would give to such notes a universal- credit co-extensive with the United States, and -leave' nothing further to be desired in the shape of a national paper currency. This would avoid all ob jection to a national bank, by obviating all necessity for one, for the purpose of furnishing a national currency. The na tional government might be made amply secure. The law might provide that ail bills secured by United States stock should be registered and countersigned in the treasury depart ment ^s the notes circulated by the banks in this State are •* registered and countersigned in this office. This would enable every collector, postmaster, or other receiver of public moneys, to know that they were receivable for public dues. " The stock of the United States by which their redemption was secured, might be so transferred to the State officer hold ing the same, that it could not be sold or transferred by him without the assent of the secretary of the treasury, and in case of the failure of the bank to redeem its notes, it might be op tional with the secretary of the treasury to exchange the notes held by the government for an equal amount of United States stock held for their redemption, or let it be, sold and receive the government's share of the dividends. In this way the national government would always be secure against loss. " But this suggestion is foreign from the chief object of this report and is merely thrown out to invite attention to the sub ject. But in conclusion, the Comptroller has no hesitation in recommending that the free bank system be modified in the particulars above suggested, and that it be then adopted in preference to the safety fund system, as the banking system of this State. " It can not be supposed that the banking under this sys tem wUI be as profitable as it has been under the safety fund system. It is therefore desirable that every facility should be given to capitalists who engage in it that can be granted con- EESIGNS THE COMPTEOLLEESHIP. 105 sistent with the security of the public, and that no unreason able or unjust system of taxation should be adopted which discriminates invidiously against them; but persons engaged in banking should be taxed Uke aU other citizens." The report from which this extract is taken is the only one ever prepared by Mr. FiUmore as Comptroller of New York. Soon after its transmission to the Legislature, he resigned that office to enter upon his duties as Vice-president of the United States. 106 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. CHAPTER VII. VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES. In accepting the office of ComptroUer, Mr. FUlmore had yielded to the urgent persuasions of his political friends at a considerable sacrifice of private interest. He was reluctant to relinquish a large and lucrative professional business, and, in con senting to take the office, he determined that, on the expiration of his term, he would return to private Ufe and devote himself to professional pursuits. When, therefore, he was soUcited to allow his name to be presented to the Whig National Conven tion, in 1848, as a candidate for Vice-president, he refused to ¦ entertain the proposal. Previous to the assembUng of the Convention, there existed, in the Whig party, great diversity of opinion as to who should be selected as candidate for President. A majority of the Whigs of New York, and several other States, were in favor of Mr. Clay ; but the great personal popularity which always attends successful miUtary exploits, seemed to render it expedient that the Whigs should select one of the two generals who had won great distinction in the war with Mexico. Besides his great military talents. Gen. Scott was supposed to possess such a knowledge of civU affairs as eminently fitted him to administer the government; and in fact, he had been a prominent Whig candida/te previous to his brilliant achievements in the Mexican war. But the same objection which was urged against Mr. Clay, appUed, in some degree, to Gen. Scott. He too, had for many years been talked of in connection with the presidency. GEN. TATLOE. 107 and was regarded by many in the light of an unsuccessful as pirant. In deciding among the three, if eminent fitness for the office were to determine the choice, there could be no doubt that the nomination should be given to Mr. Clay, whUe the reasons founded on personal availability seemed to preponder ate in favor of Gen. Taylor. He had won the earUest and some of the most brilliant victories in the Mexican war, and, though entirely destitute of civU experience, the people seemed impatient to testify their gratitude for his military services by elevating him to the first office in the republic. In fact, he had been spontaneously nominated, in various parts of the country, without any regard to his party connections, and before it was known in what direction his poUtical sympathies leaned. The principal objection made to him by such Whigs as opposed his nomination, was that there was no evidence that he belonged' to their party. Palo Alto, and Resaca de la Palma, and Mon terey, and Buena Vista, were charmed names which would at tract a host of supporters; but what evidence is there, inquired " many anxious Whigs who were not insensible to Gen. Taylor's great personal strength, what evidence is there, that if elected by Whigs he would carry out Whig principles? The follow ing letter, which found its way into the newspapers, had no tendency to remove their doubts : " Baton Bouqe, La., January 30th, 1848. " Sir: Your communication of the 15th instant has been re ceived, and the suggestions therein offered duly considered. " In reply to your inquiries, I have again to repeat, that I have neither the power nor the desire to dictate to the American people the exact manner in which they should proceed to nom inate for the presidency of the United States. If they desire such a result, they must adopt the means best suited, in their opinion, to the consummation of the purpose ; and if they think fit to bring me before them for this office, through their Legis latures, mass meetings, or conventions, I can not object to their designating these bodies as Whig, Democrat, or Native. 108 • BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE, But in being thus nominated, I must insist on the condition — and my position on this point is immutable — that I shaU not be brought forward by them as the candidate of their party, or considered as the exponent of their party doctrines. " In conclusion, I have to repeat 'hat if I were nominated for the presidency, by any body of my fellow-citizens, designa ted by any name they might choose to adopt, I should esteem it an honor, and would accept such nomination, provided it had been made entirely independent of party considerations. " I am, sir, very respectfully, " Your obedient servant, " Z. Taylor. "Peter Sken Smith, Esq., Philadelphia.'' A letter to Captain Allison, which he wrote three months later, did much to efface the impression which the one just quoted was calculated to produce, and so far satisfied a great portion of the Whigs, that General Taylor's name was promi nently brought before the Whig Convention, which met at Philadelphia, on the 1st of June,' 1848. The portions of his Allison letter in which Gen. Taylor avowed his Whig principles are the following : " I will proceed, however, now to respond to your inquiries: — "1. I reiterate what I have so often said: I am a Whig. If elected, I would not be the mere president of a party. I would endeavor to act independent of party domination. I should feel bound to administer the government untrammeled by party schemes. "2. The Veto Power. — The power given by the constitution to the executive to interpose his veto, is a high conservative power ; but in my opinion, should never be exercised except in cases of clear violation of the constitution, or manifest haste and want of consideration by Congress. Indeed, I have thought that for many yfears past the known opinions and wishes of tbe executive have exercised undue and injurious in fluence upon the legislative department of the government; and for this cause I have thought that our system was in danger of undergoing a great change from its true theory. The personal opinions of the individual who may happen to THE ¦VETO POWBE. 109 occupy the executive chair, ought not to control the action of Congress upon questions of domestic policy ; nor ought his ob- jeptions to be interposed where questions of constitutional power have been setUed by the various departments of gov ernment and acquiesced in by the people. "3. Upon the subject of the tariff, the currency, the im provement of our great highways, riveis, lakes, and harbors; the will of the people as expressed through their representa tives in Congress, ought to be respected and carried out by the executive." The principal feature of this avowal is the impUed pledge that if elected President, he would not thwart the wishes of Congress by the executive veto. The political history of the country, for the preceding thirty years, had led .the Whigs to attach great importance to the views expressed by Gen. Taylor respecting the exercise of the veto power. Gen. Jackson's veto of the biU for rechartering the United States Bank, the veto of various internal improvement biUs by Democratic pres idents, and particularly the vetoes of President Tyler, which had stung them almost to madness, had caused the Whigs to array themselves against the exercise of the veto power by the national executive, except in cases of clear and palpable viola tion of the constitution. A pledge not to defeat Whig meas ures by a veto was therefore regarded as of more practical importance than any declaration of principles which a Whig candidate could make. StiU there were many Whigs who pre ferred the old and tried leaders, who had battled for their prin ciples during a whole Ufe-time. The first ballot taken in the Convention, while it showed the popularity of Gen. Taylor, disclosed, at the same time, a strong disposition to select some one of the veteran champions of the party. The vote stood, on the first baUot, a,s follows : For Zachaiy Taylor, one hundred and eleven ; Henry Clay, ninety-seven ; Winfield Scott, forty-three ; Daniel Webster, twenty-two; John M. Clayton, four; John M'Lean, two. Necessary for a choice. 110 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. one hundred and forty; the whole number of votes being two hundred and seventy-nine. On the second ballot the vote stood for Taylor, one hundred and eighteen; Clay, eighty-six; Scott, forty-nine; Webster, twenty-two; Clayton, four. Third ballot, Taylor, one hundred and thirty-three ; Clay, seventy-four ; Scott fifty-four; Webster, seventeen; Clayton, one. On the fourth and final baUot Taylor received one hundred and seventy-one votes, and was declared elected. This result had been anticipated from the beginning, but all except five or six of the delegates from New York, and the Whigs of that State in a stiU larger proportion, preferred Mr. Clay. The friends of Gen. Taylor were understood to favor the nomination of Abbott Lawrence, of Massachusetts, as Vice- president. Mr. Lawrence was a most estimable gentleman and true Whig, personally unobjectionable to any member of the party ; but as he was known to have been a Taylor man from the beginning, it was thought that some other name on the ticket with Gen. Taylor would be more likely to insure his success. In this state of things some of the friends of Mr. FUlmore called on him, on their way to the convention, and solicited his permission to present his name as candidate for Vice-president He made objections, and expressed his intention to retire to private life on the expiration of his term of office as Comp troller. The representations of his friends were, however, so urgent as finally to draw from him a promise not to refuse in case he should be nominated. As soon as the fourth ballot, which, as we have seen, re sulted in the nomination of Gen. Taylor, was over, and the cheering which greeted the announcement both within and without the buUding, had partially subsided, Hon. John A. Collier, a State delegate from New York, and zealous ,Clay man, took the floor and made a brief speech, which was listened to with great attention. He did not conceal his LETTEE OF ACCEPTANOB. HI disappointment at a result he had done aU in his power to de feat, but declared that he would neither bolt the nomination him self, nor countenance bolting in others. And, as a pledge of the good faith with which the friends of Mr. Clay in Isiew York would support Gen. Taylor, he proposed the name of Millard FUlmore as the candidate for Vice-president These remarks were received with unbounded applause, and, in a few minutes, the Convention proceeded to ballot Of the two hundred and seventy-five votes cast on the first ballot Mr. Fillmore had one hundred and fifteen, Mr. Lawrence one hun dred and nine, and the rest were scattering. On the second baUot Mr. FUlmore received one hundred and seventy-three votes, (two more than had been given to Gen. Taylor,) and was declared nominated. To the letter of the president of the convention, informing him of his nomination, Mr. FUlmore made the foUowing reply : "Alrant, N. T., June 17th, 1848. " Sir : I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your letter of the 10th inst., by which I am notified that at the late Whig Convention held at Philadelphia, Gen. Zachary Taylor was nominated for President and myself for Vice-president and requesting my acceptance. " The honor of being thus presented by the distinguished representatives of the 'Whig party of the Union for the second office in the gift of the people — an honor ,as unexpected as it was un.solicited — could not fail to awaken in a grateful heart emotions which, while they can not be suppressed, find no appropriate language for utterance. " Fully persuaded that the cause in which we are enlisted is the cause of our country, that our chief object is to secure its peace, preserve its honor, and advance its prosperity; and feel ing, moreover, a confident assurance that in Gen. Taylor (whose name is presented for the first office) I shaU always find a firm and consistent Whig, a safe guide, and an honest man, I can not hesitate to assume any position which my friends may assign me. " Distrusting, as I well may, my abiUty to discharge satis factorily the duties of that high office, but feeling that in case 112 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. of my election, I may with safety repose upon the friendly aid. of my fellow Whigs, and that efforts guided by honest inten tions wiU always be charitably judged, I accept the nomination so generously tendered, and I do this the more cheerfully, as I am wiUing, for such a cause and with such a man, to take my chances of success or defeat as the electors, the final arbi ters of our fate, shall, in their wisdom, judge best for the interests of our common country. " Please accept the assurance of my high regard and esteem, and permit me to subscribe myself " Your friend and feUow-citizen, "Millard Fillmore. "Hon. J. M. Morehbad." The result of the presidential election which took place in November, 1848, was that Taylor and FUlmore received each one hundred and sixty-three electoral votes, against one hun dred and twenty-seven votes given to Cass and Butler, the Democratic candidates for President and Vice-president Mr. Fillmore happening to be in New York a few days after the result of the election became known, the Whig general committee, which was in session, waited on him in a body, and tendered him their congratulations on his election. Hon. Philip Hone, chairman of the general committee, addressed Mr. FiUmore as follows : " Sir : The Whig general committee wait upon you in a body to express the pleasure they feel, not only in the triumph of their principles, but a pleasure augmented by the agreeable fact that it elects you to the second office in the federal gov ernment — you, a New York boy, born on our soil, a noble son of our own institutions, who has made his own way ahead by his own industry, and energy, and devotion to correct sound principles. It is known to you that the first choice of the general committee was not the illustrious man just elected President — for our hearts were pledged elsewhere — but for the position you are to hold, you were our first choice; and whatever temporary disappointment we felt in the first result of the Philadelphia nominations, was immediately alleviated by EECEPTION m NEW TOEK. 113 the, agreeable intelUgence that you were to share its fortunes and its honors. New York knew you. Your name was fa miliar in our ears. You were the real favorite son of the State — and from the moment the ticket was formed, we gave to it our hearty, energetic, and undivided support. " Sir, in tendering you our congratulations, we may add that we look to" you to contribute your part and we know we look now with no prospect of disappointment from you, to a sound, healthy, and patriotic administration of the government You will do all you can to put the Ship of State on the right tack. You wiU engage in no intrigue, and no corruptions, that think only of a party, and nothing of the Republic. You wUl exercise what influence you have to preserve the public peace, when with honor peace can be preserved.. Indeed, we may say we look to you and to the illustrious man connected with you to undo much of what has been done for four years past. We want a patriotic, honest government We want a government for the good of the people, not the good of party only, and we are sure that in looking to you, we look to one who wUl ever maintain and never desert the right." To this address Mr. FiUmore made the foUowing reply : "Mr. Chairman: A compliment from a city like yours, the Empire City, not only of the Empire Slate, but the commer cial emporium of our whole common country, could never be properly replied to by me, even if I had time to prepare — but the suddenness of your announcement, and the warmth and heartiness with which you have welcomed me, quite unfit me to make any reply at all. I can only thank you, in my embar rassment; but I am sure it is not to me this tribute is rendered, but to the illustrious man under whose name and whose prin ciples we have aehieved the brilliant civil victory that the tele graph for the week past has been sending to us. In that man, and his simplicity, energy and straightforwardness, I have the highest confidence. I have never had the honor of taking him by the hand, or of meeting him face to face, but I have studied weU his character, and I feel, therefore, that I know him well ; for it is a character plain and open, to be read by every body, and not of that complex nature that deludes and puzzles the observer. 114: BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. "I have no doubt that under his administration you wiU realize all the high and patriotic expectations that you enter tain, and that the country will receive an impetus and a direc tion, under his honest hands, that will go far, not only to make it flourish, but to make its institutions endure. I look to him with confidence for a restoration of sound repubUcan principles, and for an administration of honest men ; and with him, I am sure, we shall have the government of the popular voice — not the expression of the arbitrary will of one man. What the people demand, the people will have, and upon them wiU de pend the success of the administration of Zachary Taylor. (Cheers.) " Gentlemen, I thank you heartily for the kindness with which you have welcomed me, and I wish you all happiness and prosperity." (Prolonged cheering.) About this time Mr. FUlmore ¦wrote a private letter to a friend, which was so honorable, patriotic and truly national, that we copy the following extract : * * * " To me there is no manifestation of popular sen timent which calls up such deep feelings of gratitude as that generous vote of my old friends and early constituents of the county of Erie. It is now twenty years since they first elected me to the Assembly, and from that day to this they have stood by me through good and through evil report and sustained me under all circumstances with a zeal and fidelity almost unknown in this country ; and the last crowning act of their continued kindness and confidence awakens the deepest emotions of a grateful heart. " I trust, too, that you will not blame me for expressing the gratification and pride which I feel in receiving so flattering a vote in my native State. But these things are in a measure personal to myself, and therefore of littie importancce. But the cordiality and unanimity with which the Whig ticket has been sustained every where, North and South, East and West is a just cause of national felicitation. It proves that the great Whig party is truly a national party— that it occupies that safe and conservative ground which secures to every section of the country all that it has a right to claim under the guaranty of the constitution— that such rights are inviolate— and as to VICE-PEESIDENT. 115 all Other questions of mere policy, where Congress has the con stitutional right to legislate, the wUl of the people, as expressed through their representatives in Congress, is to control, and that will is not to be defeated by the arbitrary interposition of the veto power. This simple rule which holds sacred all constitutional guar antees, and leaves the law-making power where the constitution placed it, in Congress, reUeves the party at once from all the embarrassing questions that arise out of sectional differences of opinion, and enables it to act harmoniously for the good of the country. When the President ceases to control the law-making power, his individual opinions of what the law ought to be, become comparatively unimportant Hence we have seen Gen. Taylor, though "attacked as a slaveholder and a pro- slavery man at the North, cordially supported and triumphantly elected by men opposed to slavery, in all its forms ; and though I have been charged at the South, in the most gross and wan ton manner, with being an abolitionist and an incendiary, yet the Whigs of the South have cast these calumnies to the winds, and, without asking or expecting any thing more than what the constitution guarantees to them on this subject they have yielded to me a most hearty and enthusiastic support. This was particularly so in New Orleans, where the attack was most violent. "Really, these Southern Whigs are noble feUows. Would you not lament to see the Union dissolved, if for no other cause than that it separated us from such true, noble and high-minded associates ? But I regard this election as putting an end to all ideas of disunion. It raises up a national party, occupying a middle ground, and leaves the fanatics and disunionists, North and South, without the hope of destroymg the fair fabric of our constitution. May it be perpetiial !" In February, 1849, Mr. FiUmore resigned his office as ComptroUer of New York, and proceeded to Washington to assume the duties of his new office. The inauguration which took place on Monday, the 5th of March, 1849, was an occasion of unusual ceremony and festiv ity. Multitudes of citizens had assembled in Washington from all parts of the Union, the attendance being greater than at 116 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. the accession to power of any previous administration. Strains of martial music, the ringing of bells, the waving of hundreds of flags, and the thronged procession, bore witness to the deep interest the occa.sion had excited. Previous to the appearance of the President elect the Senate had convened and appointed a temporary president. The diplomatic corps entered in their rich and magnificent costumes, which contrasted finely ¦with the dark robes of the Justices of the Supreme Co'urt who sat opposite to them. Mr. Dallas, the late Vice-president had been for some time in the chamber, his hak of snowy whiteness and his perfect gen tlemanly figure, naturally attracting attention. He occupied a seat in front of the secretary's table facing the Senators. Presentiy Mr. Dallas was observed to retire, and in the course of a few minutes he was seen re-entering the chamber in Com pany with Mr. Fillmore, whom he conducted to the chair of the Senate. The future presiding officer of that body took the vacant seat of his predecessor, where the oath of office was ad ministered to him by the president pro tempore, when amid profound stillness he delivered, in the calm and dignified man ner for which he is distinguished, the following brief address: "Senators: Never having been honored with a seat on this floor, and never having acted as tbe presiding officer of any legislative body, you wUl not doubt my sincerity when I assure you that I assume the responsible duties of this chair with a conscious want of experience and a just appreciation that I shall often need your friendly suggestions, and more often your indulgent forbearance. "I should indeed feel oppressed and disheartened did I not recollect that the Senate is composed of eminent statesmen, equally distinguished for their high intellectual endowments and their amenity of manners, whose persuasive eloquence is so happily tempered with habitual courtesy as to relieve your presiding officer from all that would be painful in the discharge of his duty, and render his position as agreeable as it must be mstructive. PEES^EEV ATION OP OEDEE. 117 " Thus encouraged and sustained, I enter upon the duties assigned me, firmly resolved to discharge them with impar tiality and to the best of my ability. But I should do injustice to the grateful emotions of my own heai't, if I did not on this occasion express my warmest thanks for the distinguished honor that has been conferred upon me in being called by the voice of the nation to preside over your deliberations. "It wiU not, I trust be deemed inappropriate to congratu late you on the scene now passing before us. I allude to it in no partisan aspect, but as an ever recurring event contemplated by the constitution. Compare the peaceful changes of chief magistrate of this Republic with the recent sanguinary revolu tions in Europe. "There 'the voice of the people has only been heard amid the din of arms and the hprrors of domestic conflicts ; but here in our own favored land, under the guidance of our constitu tion, the resistless wiU of the nation has from time to time been peaceably expressed by the free will of the people, and all have bowed iu obedient submission to their decree. " The administration which but yesterday wielded the desti nies of this great nation, to-day quietly yields up its power, and, without a murmur, retires from the Capital. "I congratulate you. Senators, and I congratulate my country upon these oft-recurring and cheering evidences of our capac ity for seff-government Let us hope that the sublime spec tacle we now witness may be repeated as often as the people shall desire a change of rulers, and that this venerated consti tution and this glorious Union may endure forever." Mr. FiUmore, while acting as Vice-president presided over the Senate with a dignity and urbanity which has never been surpassed. Mr. Calhoun, in 1826, had announced to the Sen ate his opinion that the Vice-president had no authority to call Senators to order for any violation of courtesy or transgres sion of the rules of debate. He conformed his practice to his opinion, and it had became a settied usage that a member was on no occasion called to order for any words he might utter on the floor of the Senate. Mr. FUlmore made a speech in ¦which he explained the reasons why he thought that it was his 118 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. diity to preserve decorum, and, if occasion should render it nec essary, reverse the usage of his predecessors. This determin ation met the warm approval of the Senate, who ordered Mr. FiUmore's speech to be entered at length on their journal. PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES. 119 CHAPTER VIIL MR. FILLMORB PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES. The large territorial acquisitions which ¦were the conse quence of the Mexican war occasioned controversies that made the brief administration of Gen. Taylor a period of intense public excitement The annexation of Texas, in which the war originated, met with general approval in the Southern States on account of its supposed tendency to fortify the institution of slavery. But if the territory ceded to the United States by the treaty of Guadaloupe Hidalgo should aU be caiTcd into free States, the ultimate effect of annexation would be a great loss of power by the South. The fact that a portion of the North- em representatives in Congress insisted on the insertion of the WUmot Proviso in every act organizing a new territory, would have been productive of considerable irritation, even if there had been nothing else in the circumstances of the time to favor sectional excitement. But the application of California for admission into the Union as a free State, made the only ses sion of Congress, which took place under the administration. of Gen. Taylor one of the most exciting that had occurred in many years. The rapid growth of California was without a parallel in history. The discovery of gold mines of extraordinary rich ness and extent had caused an immense tide of emigration to set toward the new El Dorado, not only from aU the Atlantic States, but from almost every quarter of the world. In less than two years from the discovery of her gold mines, OaUfornia, 120 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. previously almost without inhabitants, had become more pop ulcus than some of the old States, more wealthy than sev eral of them, and, without passing through the usual territorial pupilage, she had formed a State constitution, organized a State government and was applying for admission as one of the mem bers of the federal Union. It was objected that her proceed ings were irregular, .that her territory was too large for a single State, and that her boundaries had been assumed without the authority of Congress. Under different circumstances, these objections would have had but little influence, considering the urgent necessity which existed for a government of some kind. California had, at thattime,no authorized government either ter ritorial or state ; and yet from the heterogeneous character of her population and the absence of social restraints, no commu nity stood in greater need of a firm and regular government strictly enforced. The question really in dispute related to the balance of power between the slaveholding and the non-slaveholding States. States had for many years been admitted into the Union by pairs, one from each section of the country; and when California adopted her constitution the two classes of States had, for a long period, possessed an equal representation in the United States Senate. When she applied for admission as a free State, there was no slave State, either forming or likely to be formed, to balance her. From a more rapid growth of population the North had long bad a growing pre ponderance in the lower branch of Congress, and if California were admitted as a free State the South would be in a minor ity in both Houses, and without any power of effectual resist ance to legislative measures, which it might consider hostile to its interests. The Northern' majority in the House of Rep resentatives was certain to go on increasing, and if the equilib rium of the Senate were once destroyed, there was no ground to hope that it could ever be recovered. The admission of 'ADMISSION OF CALIFOENIA. 121 California into the Union as a free State, therefore, seemed to place Southern rights and interests forever afterward, at the mercy of the North. It was this state of thing^s which gave so deep a significance to the admission of California, and rendered it the occasion of such earnest and vehement controversy. It was foreseen that the South would struggle against it as if its very existence were in peril, for in all future legislation involving the question of slavery it was regarded as a death blow to its interests. If California were admitted, the South could see no safety except in secession from the Union. Mr. Clay, with the far-reaching sagacity for which he was distinguished, at once comprehended the magnitude of the crisis. He surrendefed his whole mind to earnest and painful reflection, with a view to discover some method by which con flicting interests might be reconcUed, and the Union rescued from the imminent peril which threatened its existence. He blearly saw that the loss of the balance of power between the two sec tions of country would become a matter of trivial importance to the South, if, together with the admission of California, measures could be adopted which would forever remove all questions affecting the interests of slavery beyond the sphere of federal legislation. The South might reconcile themselves to the necessity of passing into a perpetual minority by the admission of California, if there could be coupled with her ad mission a final settlement of all questions in which the interests of the two great sections of the country were supposed to con flict. It was with a view to accomplish such a settlement, that he brought forward his celebrated Compromise scheme, which its enemies named, in derision, the "Omnibus Bill." It proposed to admit California into the Union as a free State ; to organize territorial governments for New Mexico and Utah, leaving the question of slavery to the decision of the in habitants; to define the boundaries of Texas; and to make 123 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. more effectual provision for enforcing the requirements of the constitution relating to fugitives from labor. The combining of so great a variety of measures into one bill, was what led to its being designated as the "Omnibus." Although it is, with out doubt a sound principle of legislation that every measure ought as far as possible, to stand on its own separate merits, it seemed necessary, in order to accomplish the settiement which Mr. Clay proposed, that these should stand together. Whatever might be the ostensible pretexts for opposing the admission of California, the actual reason was, that it destroyed irrecoverably the balance of power between the Northern and Southern States. This consideration aside, the reasons for her admission were too powerful and urgent to be resisted. But this consideration had so strong a tendency to inflame Southern feeUng, that the measure had little chance of success unless the others could be joined with it The South was not likely to relinquish, voluntarily, all check upon legislation affecting sla very, unless it could be assured that the whole subject was to be withdrawn from future congressional action. Hence the importance Mr. Clay attached to combining aU these separate • measures into a single biU. Other public men, who were equally patriotic, and equally solicitous that all the distracting questions growing out of slavery should receive a final settlement, while they admitted the importance of all Mr. Clay's measures, and the indispens able necessity for their all passing, considered it a matter of indifference whether they were embodied in a single bill or acted on separately. Among these was Mr. Webster, who was as earnest in his devotion to the Union, and as ardent in his efforts for the restoration of tranquUUty, as any member of the Senate. He thought it due to California that she should be admitted into the Union ; to the South that the constitutional provision for the recovery of fugitive slaves should be enforced; to the whole country, that the quarrel between the citizens of THE SLAVEET QUESTION. 123 Texas and New Mexico should be settied ; but so far as related to slavery in the territories, he thought it a question of no practical importance, and not worth the ill feeling it had engen dered. He contended in one of the ablest speeches ever delivered in Congress, that there was not a foot of territory within the Umits of the United States whose condition, as re gards slavery, was not already fixed by some irrepealable law. Neither he nor any other statesman. North or South — neither he nor any other citizen of any section of the country, supposed, at that time, that a repeal of the Missouri compro mise would ever be proposed, much less ever become possible ; and when he caUed it an irrepealable law excluding slavery from all territory north of an estabUshed line, nobody ques tioned or doubted that as far as that went, he was perfectly correct Nobody could then have foreseen so gross a political blunder, such a wanton violation of good faith, as has since been committed by a Democratic administration, and sanctioned by the Democratic party. With regard to the territories to which the Missouri compromise did not apply, slavery was ex cluded from some of them by positive enactment, and from the others by laws equally operative and entirely irrepealable. As there was nothing which was susceptible of alteration in any territory belonging to the United States, so far related to the existence of slavery in it Mr. Webster judged correctiy that agitation on this subject was as idle as it was mischievous. But whatever foundation there might be for agitation, whether much or Uttle, he considered it important that a period should be put to it. At the death of Gen. Taylor, Congress had been in session upward of seven months, and the whole time had been consumed in discussions relating to slavery. Not to dwell on the violent sectional animosities which such discussions can not faU to excite, this neglect of the usual business of leg islation is in itself a great evil. It is a great enl to have the wheels of useful legislation blocked by such discussions 124 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. even for a single session ; but when ihe whole time of Congress is, year after year, wasted in this mischievous employment and all the great interests of the country permitted to suffer for want of necessary legislation, it is high time that so troublesome and pernicious a topic should be withdrawn from national poli tics. This was the general feeling of patriotic men in 185G„ and although many statesmen thought the separate portions of Mr. Clay's omnibus bill should receive separate action, they did not doubt that the success of every measure was necessary to the tranquUUty of the country and the preservation of the Union. It was in the midst of those discussions, which had already continued more than seven months, that Gen. Taylor died. His death was sudden and unexpected, and occurring at a time when the public mind was profoundly agitated and full of ap prehension, it was calculated to make a deep impression. It was a most trying and critical period for the government to pass into new hands, and the country appreciated the difficul ties which would surround Gen. Taylpr's successor. President Taylor died on Tuesday, the 9th of July, 1850, at half past ten in the evening. On the preceding Thursday, which was the anniversary of American independence, he was in the enjoyment of his usual health, and attended the cele bration of the day at the Washington Monument. The oration ^as long, and the President listened to it with his head uncov ered, exposed to a breeze which it was feared at the time might be detrimental to his health. Next mofning he was at tacked with cholera morbus; remittent fever supervened; the disease baffled all the skill of able physicians, and an hour and a half before midnight on Tuesday, his eyes were closed in their last sleep. He retained his reason to the last and was perfectiy calm and tranquU. His last words were, " I am prepared — I have endeavored TO no MY DUTY." Zachary Taylor was born in Orange county, in Vu-ginia, in 1764. He early displayed great energy and boldness of PEESIDENT TATLOK. 123 character, and »t the age of twenty-four, was appointed a heu tenant in the army. This was during the administration of President Jefferson. In 1812, he rose to the rank of captain, and after the declaration of war with Great Britain in that year, he was brevetted major by President Madison, for his gallant defense of Fort Harrison against a large body of sav ages*. In 1832, he had been promoted to the rank of colonel, and distinguished himself in the Black Hawk war. Ordered to Florida in 1836, he distinguished himself by his signal services against the Seminoles, and was created brevet brigadier general and commander-in-chief of the United States forces in Florida. He was afterward transferred to the command, of the division of the army on the south-western frontier; was ordere^d, to Texas in 1845; advanced to the left bank of the Rio Grande, and; in the early part, of the Mexican war, won battles whose names are household words at every American fireade. When, as a reward for illustrious services in the field, he was called by an admiring and grateful' people to. the head of the, government he exhibited patriotism, honesty and good sense,, united with a kindness and benignity of temper which enr deared him to his countrymen. On the tenth of July, the next day after the decease of Gen. Taylor, Mr. FiUmore sent to the Senate a brief message announcing that he should no longer act as their presiding offi cer, and another relatingto the death, of President Taylor, which we copy : " ¦Washinston, July 10th, 1850., " Fellow -citizens of the Senate and. of the Howe of Rep resentatives: — I have to perform the melanchqly d^uty of an nouncing to you that it has pleased Almighty God to remove from this Ufe Zachary Taylor, late President of the United States. He deceased last evening at the hour of half-past ten o'clock, in the midst of his family, and surrounded by affection ate friends, calmly, and in the full possession of all his facul ties. Among his last words were these, which he uttered with 126 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. emphatic distinctness: 'I have always done my duty — lam ready to die; my only regret is for the friends I leave be hind me.' , " Having announced to you, fellow-citizens, this most affiict- ino- bereavement, and assuring you that it has penetrated no heart with deeper grief than mine, it remains for me to say that I propose this day, at twelve o'clock, in the hall of the House of Representatives, in the presence of both houses of Congress, to take the oath prescribed by the constitution, to enable me to enter on the execution of the office which this event has de volved on me. "Millard Fillmore." Mr. Webster then submitted the following resolutions which were unanimously agreed to: " Resolved, That the two houses will assemble this day in the hall of the House of Representatives, at twelve o'clock, to be present at the administration of the oath prescribed by the con stitution to the late Vice-president of the United States, to ena ble him to discharge the powers and duties of the office of President of the United States, devolved on him by the death of Zachary Taylor, late President of the United States. "Resolved, That the secretary of the Senate present the above resolution to the House of Representatives, and ask its concurrence therein." A message was then received from the House of Represent atives transmitting a resolution and requesting the concurrence of the Senate. The resolution was as follows : "Resolved, That the Hon. Messrs. Winthrop, Morse, and Morehead, be appointed a committee on the part of this House, to join such a committee as may be appointed by the Senate, to wait on the President of the United States, and inform him that the Senate and House of Representatives wUl be in read iness to receive him in the haU of the House of Representatives this day, at twelve o'clock, for the purpose of witnessing the ad ministration of the oath prescribed by the constitution to enable him to enter upon the execution of the office." DEATH OF PEESIDENT TATLOE. 127 The Senate concurred in the resolution, appointed Mr. Soule, Mr. Davis, of Massachusetts, and Mr. Underwood, a committee on their part ^nd ordered their secretary to notify the House of Representatives accordingly. Mr. Soule afterward informed the Senate that the committee appointed to wait on the President had performed the duty assigned them, and that they had been informed by the Pres ident that he would take the oath of office at twelve o'clock, in the hall of the House of Representatives, and that he desired the attendance of the Senate. Whereupon the Senate proceeded to the hall of the House of Representatives. In the haU of the House of Representatives after the appear ance of the Senate, the President entered accompanied by the cabinet the members remaining standing as a mark of respect The oath was administered by Judge Cranch, and after the President of the United States, the cabinet and the Senate had retired, the speaker announced that he had received another messao-e from the President. It was then read as follows: o "¦WAsmnGTON, July 10th, 1850. "Fellow-citizens of the Senate and of the House of Repre sentatives: — A great man has fallen among us, and a whole country is called to an occasion of unexpected deep and gen eral mourning. " I recommend to the two Houses of Congress to adopt such measure* as in their discretion may seem proper, to perform with due solemnity the funeral obsequies of Zachary Taylor, late President of the United States ; and thereby to signify the great and affectionate regard of the American people for the memory of one whose life has been devoted to the public ser vice; whose career in arms has not been surpassed in useful ness or brilliancy; who has been so recently raised by the unsolicited voice of the people to the highest civil authority in the government, which he administered with so ranch honor and advantage to his country ;' and by whose sudden death so many hopes of future usefulness have been blighted forever. "To you, Senators and Representatives of a nation in tears. 128 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. I can say nothing which can alleviate the sorrow with which you ai'e oppi-essed. " I appeal to you to aid me under the trying circumstances which surround, in the discharge of the duties, from which, however much I may be oppressed by them, I dare not shrink; and I rely upon Him, who holds in his hands the destinies of nations, to endow me with the requisite strength for the task, and to avert from our country the evUs apprehended from the heavy calamity which has befallen us. "I shall most readily concur in whatever measures the wis dom of the two Houses may suggest as befitting this deeply melancholy occasion. "Millard Fillmore." The funeral of President Taylor was celebrated on Saturday, the 13 th of July, with solemn ceremonies befitting the high character and official dignity of the deceased. We have already aUuded to the agitating controversy in Congress during the pending of which Gen. Taylor was stricken down by a dispensation of providence, leaving the country in a condition so critical as to devolve an immense weight of_re- sponsibility on his constitutional successor. To add to the em barrassment of President FUlmore, the cabinet immediately tendered their resignation, and the first question he had to con sider was whether he would solicit their continuance in offics or appoint a new cabinet. It was understood that the cabinet of Gen. Taylor were opposed to Mr. Clay's omnibus bill, then pending in the Sen ate, with a great deal df doubt hanging over its succesg. The President approved, in the main, of the measures embodied in that bill, and thought it his duty to favor their adoption. He rightiy thought that on questions so important there should be no difference of opinion between the President and his consti tutional advisers, and that it was necessary to have a cabinet whd would sustain him in the course he had determined to adopt and whose reputation was identified with his success. He therefore decided to accept the resignation of Gen. Taylor's cabinet and appoint a new one. THB NE^W CABINET. 129 1 CHAPTER IX. THB COMPROMISE MEASURES AND FUGITIVE SLAVE LAW. On the 20th of July, ten days after President FiUmore took the oath of office, he transmitted to the Senate a message nom inating^ the foUowing named gentiemen as his cabinet: Daniel Webster, of Massachusetts, Secretary of State. Thomas Corwin, of Ohio, Secretary of the Treasury. James A. Pearce, of Maryland; Secretary of the Interior. Wilucam a. Graham, of North CaroUna, Secretary of the Navy. Edward Bates, of Missouri, Secretary of War. Nathan K. Hall, of New York, Postmaster-General. John J. Crittenden, of Kentucky, Attorney-General. This cabinet embodied eminent abiUty, large experience in public affairs, and great weight of character. The nominations were all confirmed by the Senate, but Mr. Pearce and Mr. Bates were prevented by circumstances from accepting the places tendered them. After some delay, Alexander H. H. Stuart, of Virginia, was appointed Secretary of the Interior, and G. M. Conrad, of Louisiana, Secretary of Wiat. Only a few days elapsed after Mr. FiUmore's accession to the presidency, before the "omnibus biU" was brought to a vote in the Senate and defeated. , Affairs were now rapidly approaching a crisis which de manded the calmest wisdom united with the greatest firmness. Strong anti-slavery conventions were held iu the North; eq.uaUy 6* 130 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. Strong secession conventions were held in the South; the spirit of sectional strife seemed arming itself for a mighty conffifct. The Senators and Representatives from CaUfornia had become weary of their long waiting at Washington knocking at the doors of Congress; Texas and New Mexico, in the midst of an angry controversy relative to their boundaries, were armmg for civil war; the disaffected South was ready to sustain Texas in her claims ; and it became necessary for the general gov ernment to protect New Mexico against armed invasion by that State. " The President ordered the requisite miUtary force and mu nitions of war to be put in motion for New Mexico, and on the sixth of August 1850, he sent a message to Congress advising that body of the imminent danger of a collision, and urging, in the strongest terms, a speedy settlement of the controversy. Congress appreciated the danger, renewed its efforts to settle the vexed questions, and soon passed the several acts by which California was admitted into the Union as a State ; the bound ary line between Texas and New Mexico defined, and an indemnity provided for the claim of Texas; territorial govern ments established for New Mexico and Utah ; the slave trade abolished in the District of Columbia; and more effectual provision made for the rendition of fugitive slaves. These have since been collectively designated as the "compromise measures." The President had some doubt whether the fugitive slave act did not conflict with the provision of the constitution re lating to the writ of habeas corpus, and referred the subject to the Attorney-General. Attorney-General Crittenden prepared a written opinion, in which he showed by a clear and conclu- siye argument, supported by the decisions of the Supreme Court that there is nothing in the biU submitted to him, which is in conflict with the constitution, or which suspends or was intended to suspend the writ of habeas corpus. It is a 131 well known and admitted fact, proved by abundant historical evidence, and assumed in all judicial decisions relating to the subject, that the clause of the constitution which requires the surrender of fugitive slaves was intended to secure to the citi zens of slaveholding States complete ownership in their slaves in every State or territory of the Union into which they might escape. It devolved on the general government to make that security effectual, and accordingly the act of 1793 was passed, which, so far as it respects any constitutional question* that can arise out of it, is identical with the bill submitted to the Attorney-General for his opinion. It authorized the like arrest of the fugitive slave, the like trial, the like judgment the Uke certificate, with the like authority to the owner, by virtue of that, certificate as his warrant, to remove him to the State or territory from which he escaped. And yet the constitutional ity of the act of 1793 has been affirmed by the adjudieations of State tribunals, and by the courts of the 'United States, without a' single instance of dissent The Supreme Court of (the United States has decided that independent of any aid from legislation, the owner of a fugitive slave may, in virtue of the constitution and his own right of property, seize and re-capture him in any State or territory in which he may find him, and carry him back to the place from which he escaped. The biU under consideration, therefore, conferred no right on the owner of a fugitive slave, but only gave him an appointed and peaceable remedy, in place of the more exposed and in secure, but not less lawful mode of self-redress. The fugitive has no reason to complain of the bUI, for it adds no coercion to that which the owner of the slave might himself exercise ¦without any resort to legal process. It is in fact a benefit to the fugitive so far as it interposes judicial authority between him and the power of his owner. With regard to whether this act suspended the writ of habeas corpus, which was the point to which the President had 132 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED HLLMOEE. more particularly called his attention, the Attorney-General, was clearly of the opinion that there was no incompatibililsy between any of the provisions of the bill and the privilege of that writ in its utmost constitutional latitude. It is not within the privilege or province of that great writ to loose those whom the law has bound, but to discharge persons from illegal custody, The writ ftUows the law and obeys the law. If on application for this writ it shall appear to the court or judge that the con- finemftnt of the person asking for it is lawfid, the writ wiU al ways be refused. If a person is in custody by the decision of a court from which ^here is no appeal, the decision itself is to be regarded as conclusive evidence that the confinement is legal, and not only can the writ of habeas corpus not discharge him, but no court or judge has any authority to grant it, There is no process or tribunal by which the decisions of a court of last resort can be reviewed, and there is nothing in, the writ of habeas corpus by which they can be set aside. A provision of the constitution of the United States requires. that fugitive slaves shall be surrendered to their owners. The . bUl for their rendition was intended to enforce this requirement It constitutes a tribunal, with exclusive jmisdiction to determine summarily and without appeal, who are fugitive slaves. The judgment of every tribunal of exclusive jurisdiction, where no appeal lies, is of necessity conclusive upon every other tribunal ; and therefore the judgment of the tribunal created by the fugitive slave act is conclusive upon all the tribunals. When ever this judgment is made to appear, it is conclusive of the right of the owner to retain in his custody the fugitive from his service, and to remove hioi back to the State from which he escaped. If it is shown on the application of the fugitive slave for the writ of habeas corpus, it prevents the issuing of the writ — if upon the return, it discharges the writ and re stores or maintains the custody. Such is the substance of the reasoning by which the Attorney- THE; FUGITIVE SLAVE LA^W. ]j33; General suppprted his: opinion, and being satisfactory to the Eresijdent as to the constitutional question, he signed the fugi tive slave law, as well as the other bUIs previously enumerated, and known as "the compromise measures." The act for the rendition of fugitive slaves was immediately attacked with great violence by the anti-slavery party of the North. Slaves were rescued from the cu^ody of the United States marshals at Boston, Syracuse, and at Christiana, in the State of Pennsylvania, and, in the last named of these places, one or two persons, were kiUed. The President avowed his intention to execute the law. When intelUgence of the pro ceeding's of the Boston mob reached Washington, the President issued his proclamation caUing upon all officers to do their duty, and prosecutions were instituted against the rioters, but the prejudices; of the jury and the difficulty of identifying the criminals generally, enabled them to escape. At Syracuse one was convicted,, but he died before sentence was passed, upon him, The vehemence with which the fugitive slave act was as- saUed, renders it proper that we should explain its necessity more fuUy than would otherwise be consistent with our Umits. The President was denounced for having given it his approval,, was even threatened; with violence in anonymous communica tions, and the most, strenuous exertions were made to indjice the people to resist the. execution of the law by force. The opposition which was ostensibly directed against the law, was really aiiaei at the provision of the constitution, whicibthe law. was intended to enforce. It was considered more decorous, to assail a particular act of legislation than to make , an open, declaration of hostiUty, against the constitution of the country; but tiie transactions of this period wiU be wholly misconceived unless we look beneath the pretences of the antir slavery party, and discern the motives by which they were actually governed. 134 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. The constitution of the United States declares that "no person held to service or labor in one State under the laws thereof, escaping into another, shall in consequence of any law or regulation therein, be discharged from such service or labor, but SHALL be delivered up on the claim of the party to whom such service or labor may be due." That the real ground of opposition to the fugitive slave law was a wish to defeat this provision of the constitution, is proved by the fact that in the violent attempts to rescue negroes from their claimants, there was scarcely a case in which there was any .reasonable doubt that the person claimed was actually a fugitive slave — that he wks really one of those persons whom the constitution requires to be deUvered up on the claim of the owner. Another reason for supposing the opposition was aimed at the constitution itself, is found in the admissions and avowals of the anti-slavery party itself, There would perhaps be an unfairness in quoting the language of obscure and irresponsi ble members of the party ; we wUl therefore draw our proofs from the speeches of the ablest and most respected of its re cognized leaders. WUUam H. Seward, of New York, has for many years been regarded as the leading anti-slavery man of the Northern States, and the principal expounder of anti-slavery doctrines. He has repeatedly declared his opposition to that provision of the constitution which requires the surrender of fugitive slaves. In a speech deUvered at Cleveland, Ohio, in 1848, Mr. Seward said: "It is written in the constitution of the United States that five slaves shaU count equal to three free men, as a basis of representation ; it is also written, in violation of the Divine law, that we shall surrender the fugitive slave who takes refuge at our fireside from his relentless pursuers." * * Seward's Works, Vol. Ill, p. .SOO. ME. sewaed's opinions. 135 In the same speech Mr. Seward exhorts his hearers to use ¦ their efforts to defeat the operation of that provision of the constitution which he had told them was "in violation of the Divine law." He said : " Inculcate, then, the law of freedom y iriilitary execution; their estates are confiscated,. their ^miUes disferseti, and every castle, fortress, and city of Hungary is in the pos session of the forces of Austria. "They theitiselves, by their desire to rembve so far from the scene of their late conflict declare that thfey eritertdin riij hope or thought of other similar attempts, and wish only to be permitted to withdraw themselves altogether from all European associations, and seek new homes in the vast regions of the United States. " For their attempts at independence they have most dearly paid; and now, broken in fortune arid in heart. Without hom6 or country — a band of exiles whose drily future is a fearfu} remembrance of the, past; whose only request is to spend their remaining days in obscure industry — they want the per mission of Ills indperial iriajesty to remove themselves, and all that may remain to t&etti, across the ocean to the .unciiltivatea t«gions of America, and leave toiefht a continent which has become more gloomy than the wHderness; more lone aad dreary than the desert" ITo foreignei" e^ver approached our hospitable stores who excited so riiuch interest and sympathy as ¦was felt. for Kos suth. Little was it dreamed that in tte vtery act of accepting. bur hospitality he would turn our accuser. Little was it thbviglit that he Would immediately arraign our goveriiiberit id recreatil to the cause of universal Uberty, because it adhered to the ¦wise jidlicy of Washington, ami declined to take part iri tiie struggles of foreign nations. Littie was it supposed that this Ulustripus Hiifagarian exile Wpuld appeal from the Anieri can government to the American people, and attempt to cpm- pel acquiescence iri his scheriies by influencing the presidential elfection. feut, little as it was expected, all this turned pixt to 210 BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. be true. No one can have forgotten the effect produced on the public mind by Kossuth's seductive eloquence. If, during the two or three weeks when the excitement was at its height the proposal to abandon the neutral policy of the government could have been decided by a popular vote, there would probably have been a large majority in favor of Kossuth. Happily, by the firmness of the government, and the returning good sense of the people, this dangerous mania subsided, and gradually disappeared; and Kossuth, who was received on his arrival with great ovations, became so unpopular before he left the country, that he deemed it prudent to engage his passage on board the steamer under an assumed name. His visit to this country was calculated to lead thoughtful minds to reflect on the growing danger of foreign influence. Had the President shown any marks of sympathy with the popular excitement which, fpr several weeks, ran sp high, there is np dpubt that the foreign policy of the government would have undergone a complete revolution. Mr, Clay, who was then living, fully coincided in the views of the President, and in his interview with Kossuth explained, with his accustomed eloquence, the reasons why it was not expedient for our gov ernment to embark in the cause of Hungary. Colonel Benton, in addressing a meeting of citizens in Missouri, paid a deserved tribute to Mr. FUlmore and Mr. Clay, in connection with this subject • " I am opposed," said Colonel Benton, " to interven ing, and under all its forms; and as much as any, in the form of 'protest,' to be unsupported by acts if the protest should be disregarded. Of the eminent pubUc men of our country who have accosted this question most to my satisfaction, Mr. FUlmore and Mr. Clay are the two foremost; they have given It a prompt and unqualified opposition in all its forms. This, in my opinion, is the American position." When Kossuth had failed m his appUcation to the American government, and in his appeal to the great body of the Ameri- FOEEIGN INFLUENCE. 211 can people, he attempted to carry out his project by operating on the prejudices of our foreign-born citizens. His efforts in this direction afford a strUiing illustration of the dangers which result from having a large body of voters in our midst, whose political sympathies are more fuUy given to the revolutionary movements of the old world than to the institutions of their adopted country. In a speech to German citizens in the city of New York, on the 14th of June, 1852, Kossuth said: " You are strong enough to effect the election of that candi date for the Presidency who gives the most attention to the European cause. I find that quite natural, because between both parties there is no difference as regards the internal policy, and because only by the inanity of the German citizens of this country, the electron wUl be such that by and by, the adnunistration will turn their attention to other countries, and give every nation free scope. No. tree, my German friends, faUs with the first stroke ; it is therefore necessary that, inas much as you are citizens, and can command your votes, you support the candidate who will pursue the external policy in our sense, and endeavor to effect that all nations become free and independent, such as is the case in happy America." On the 23d of the same month, Kossuth addressed a large assemblage of Germans at the' Broadway Tabernacle. After the close of his speech a series of resolutions were adopted, of which the foUo^wing are specimens: "Resolved, That, as American citizens, we will attach our selves to the Democratic party, and will devote ov/r strength to having a policy of intervention in America carried out. " Resolved, That we expect that the candidate of the Demo cratic party will adopt the principles of this policy, which has been sanctioned by all distinguished statesmen of his party. "Resolved, That we protest against the manner in which, heretofore, the goverarrient of the United States has inter preted and applied the. policy of neutrality, which is in viola tion of the spirit of ihe constitution of the United States. fil3 BIOGEAPHT 6F MittAEb' FILLMOEE. "ReidVedi That we ask thalt evety AriUeriftan citizijn, ttot Uing attached to the soil, may support the strength of any other people in the sense as the juries have interpreted the principles of the American constitution, and especially of the policy of neutrajity." A few daiys afterwajfd,' KossfctW prepared ^ secret* Cu-cular, which comaienBed as fol'lo'v^s: New York, June 28th, 1852. "Sir: — I hope you iave read already my German farewell speech, delivered June 23d, in the Tabemaele at New York, and also the resolutions of the meeting, which were passed consequently. " 1 hope, further, that the impression which this matter has made upon both political parties lias not escaped your attention. " Indeed, it is not easy to be mistaken, that the German citizens of America will have ihe casting vote in the coming election, if they are united in a joint direction upon the plat form of the principles set forth in the speech aforementioned. " They may decide upon the exterior policy of the next adriiinistration of the United States, and with that upon the triumph or the fall of liberty in Europe." No careful reader of these extracts can fail to perceive that tliey disclose a niethod by which the presidential election of this couiitry riiight be carried, arid the policy of the govern- inent controlled iif persons of foreign birth and sympathies. The only sure preventive ef sp great an 6vil is to exclude from any share in the government all except citizens who are thor oughly imbued with American sentiments. After the close of' Mr. FUlmore's adtoinistratiOD, it was his interiiion, beforfe returning to his hdine iri Btiffalcr, to comply T*ith tiurflerouS invitations lie hiA rCceifred to visit the South. But Severe domestic affliction coriapeUed tirii to postpone this intention, and it was not till the spring of 1854 that he was able to rhake the proposed tour. He then visited all the prineipial south-^WestefH arid southern eitieS, and was etei-ywhere reee^red ME. FJlIiMOPE's AMEEJGANISM, 21S with demonstrations of respect and welcome, ipoi'e spontanepiis, cordial and extensive than had ever before been bestpwed pn a private citizen. In the summer of that year Mr. FUlmore was compeUed again to drink deep pf the cup of affliction, and some month? afterward he was mduced to seek relief from the loneliness of 9 home which death had rendered nearly desp- ¦late, by a visit to the old world. During the season of retirer ment and domestic grief which preceded his embarkation for Europe, Mr. FUlmore took no active part in poUtics, beyond ,the exercise pf the citizen's right of voting. 'When the Ameri can party arose, he approved pf its objects, and, in the first election in which he had an opportunity to do so, voted for its candidates. In the early part of the year 1855, he formally united with the American party, £md assumed its pbligatipns. Hpw fully he appreciated the necessity pf the American piove- ment and endorsed the principles in which it had its origin, may be seen in the foUowing private letter, written to a friend in PhUadelphia: " Buffalo, Ne» Xcirk, Jan. 3d, 1855. "Rkspectbd Fbiend Isaac Ne^wton^ " It would give me great pleasure to accept yonr Itind in vitation to visit Philadelphia, if it were ppssi'ble to ^a^e flay ¦visit private, and Umit it to a few perspnal friends wl^qnu I shpuld be most happy to see. But t know that this wp^l4 be out of nay power; and I am therefore reluctantly compelled to decUne your invitation, as I have done ptiieirs to New York and Boston for the same reason. "I return you many thanks for your inforrnatjon qn -the subject of poUtics. I ani always happy to liear >vhat ig going .forward ; but independently of the fact that J. feel myg^lf with- ^awn from the political arena, I have been top muqh.depressed in spirit to take an active part in the late eiectipns. I con tented myself wiQi giving a sUent vote for Mr. .l^llman fpr governor. " W bile, however, I am an inactive observer of public <^vent^^ I sm by no means an indifferent one; ^nd I may say tp yqu, in the frankness of private friendship, I have for a long time 214 .BIOGEAPHT OF MILLAED FILLMOEE. looked with dread and apprehension at the corrupting influence which the contest for the foreign vote is exciting upon our elections. This seems to result from its being banded together, and subject to the control of a few interested and selfish leaders. Henee, it has been a subject of bargain and sale, and each of the great political parties of the country have been bidding to obtain it; and, as usual in all such contests, the party which is most corrupt is most successful. The conse quence is, that it is fast demoralizing the whole country ; cor rupting the very fountains of poUtical power; and converting the ballot-box — that great palladium of our liberty — into an unmeaning mockery, where the rights of native-born citizens are voted away by those who blindly follow their mercenary and selfish leaders. The evidence of this is found not merely in the shameless chaffering for the foreign vote at every elec tion, but in the large ilisproportion of offices which are now held by foreigners, at home and abroad, as compared with our native citizens. 'Where is the true-hearted American whose cheek does not tingle with shame and mortification, to see our highest and most coveted foreign missions .filled by men of foreign birth, to the exclusion of native born ? Such appoint ments are a humUiating confession to the crowned heads of Europe, that a republican soil does not produce sufficient talent to represent a repubUcan nation at a monarchical court; I confess that it seems to me, with all due respect to others, that as a general rule, our country should be governed by American-born citizens. Let us give to the oppressed of every country an asylum and a home in our happy land; give to all the benefits of equal laws and equal protection ; but let us at the same time cherish as the apple of our eye the great prin ciples of constitutional Uberty, which few who have not had the good fortune to be reared in a free country know how to appreciate, and still l§ss how to preserve. "Washing-ton, in that inestimable legacy which he left to his country — his farewell address — has wisely warned us to beware of foreign influence as the most baneful foe of a repub lican government He saw it to be sure, in a different light from that in which it now presents itself; but he knew that it would approach in all forms, and hence he cautioned us against the insidious wUes of its influence. Therefore, as well for our own sakes, to whom this invaluable inheritance of self-govern- AMEEICAN PEINCIPLES. 215 ment has been left by our forefathers, as for the sake of the unborn miUions who are to inherit this land — foreign and native — let us take warning of the father of his country, and do what we can to preserve Pur institutipns frpm cprruptipn, and our country from dishonor; but let this be done by the people themselves in their sovereign capacity, by making a proper discrimination in the selection of officers, and not by depriving any individual, native or foreign-born, of any con stitutional or legal right to which he is now entitled. " These are my sentiments in brief; and although I have sometimes almost despaired of my country, when I have wit nessed the rapid strides of corruption, yet I thinki perceive a gleam of hope in the future, and I now feel confident that when the great mass of inteUigence in this enUghtened country is once fully aroused, and the danger manifested, it will fear lessly apply the remedy, and bring b^ck the government to the pure days of Washington's administraftion. Finally, let us adopt the old Roman motto, ' Never despair of the republic' Let us do our duty, and trust in that providence which has so signally watched over and preserved us, for the result But I have said more than I intended, and much more than I should have said to any one but a trusted friend, as I have no desire to mingle in poUtical strife, itemember me kindly to your femUy, and, believe me, " I am truly yours, "Millard Fillmorb." YALE UNIVERSITY a39002 001072561b .ri^ r > » ¦m a>"s<: H i