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Martin Van Buren (December 5, 1782 – July 24, 1862) was the eighth President of the United States, serving from 1837 to 1841. Before his presidency, he was the eighth Vice President (1833 – 1837) and the 10th Secretary of State under Andrew Jackson (1829 – 1831). He was a key organizer of the Democratic Party, a dominant figure in the Second Party System, and the first president not of British descent — his family was Dutch. He was the first president to be born an American citizen, his predecessors having been born British subjects before the American Revolution. He is also the only president not to have spoken English as his first language, having grown up speaking Dutch. Moreover, he was the first president from New York. Van Buren
was the third president to serve only one term, after John Adams and his son, John Quincy
Adams. He also was one of the central figures in developing
modern political organizations. As Andrew Jackson's
Secretary of State and then Vice President, he was a key figure in
building the organizational structure for Jacksonian
democracy,
particularly in New York State. However, as a president, his
administration was largely characterized by the economic hardship of
his time, the Panic of 1837.
Between the bloodless Aroostook War and the Caroline Affair, relations
with Britain and its colonies in Canada also
proved to be strained. Whether or not these were directly his fault,
Van Buren was voted out of office after four years, with a close
popular vote but a rout in the electoral vote. In 1848, he ran for
president on a third-party ticket, the Free Soil Party.
Martin Van Buren is one of only two people, the other being Thomas Jefferson,
to serve as Secretary of State, Vice President and President. Martin
Van Buren was born in the village of Kinderhook, New York,
on December 5, 1782, approximately 25 miles south of Albany.
His father, Abraham van Buren (1737 – 1817) was a farmer, the owner of
six slaves, and a tavern keeper in Kinderhook. Abraham Van Buren
supported the American Revolution and later the Jeffersonian
Republicans. He died while Martin Van Buren was a New York state
senator. Martin Van Buren's mother was Maria Hoes (van Alen) van Buren
(1747 – 1818).
Van
Buren was the first president born a citizen of the United States, as
all previous presidents were born before the American Revolution. His
great-great-great-great-grandfather Cornelis had come to the New World
in 1631 from the Dutch Republic,
present day Netherlands.
Van Buren was also the only President who spoke English as a second
language. Van
Buren received a basic education at a dreary, poorly lit schoolhouse in
his native village and later studied Latin briefly at the Kinderhook
Academy and Washington
Seminary in
Claverack. He
excelled in composition and speaking. His formal education ended before
he reached 14, when he began studying law at the office of Francis
Sylvester, a prominent Federalist attorney in Kinderhook. After six
years under Sylvester, he spent a final year of apprenticeship in the
New York City office of William P. Van
Ness, a political lieutenant of Aaron Burr.
Van Buren was admitted to the bar in 1803. Van
Buren married Hannah Hoes, his childhood sweetheart and distant
relative on February 21, 1807, in Catskill, New York. Like Van Buren,
she was raised in a Dutch home and never lost her distinct Dutch
accent. The couple had five sons and one daughter: Abraham (1807
- 1873) a graduate of West Point and career military officer; John (1810 - 1866),
graduate of Yale and Attorney General of New York; Martin, Jr. (1812 -
1855), secretary to his father and editor of his father's papers until
a premature death from tuberculosis; Winfield Scott (born and died in
1814); and Smith Thompson (1817 – 1876), an editor and special
assistant to his father while president. Their daughter was stillborn.
After 12
years of marriage, Hannah Van Buren contracted tuberculosis and died on
February 5, 1819, at the age of 35. Martin Van Buren never remarried. Van Buren
had been active in politics from at least the age of 17 when he
attended a party convention in Troy, New York, where he worked to secure the
Congressional nomination for John Van Ness.
However,
once established in his practice, he became wealthy enough to
increase his focus on politics. He was an early supporter of Aaron Burr.
He allied himself with the Clintonian faction of the Democratic -
Republican Party, and was surrogate of Columbia County from 1808 until 1813, when
he was removed. Van Buren
joined the opposition party in 1813 and tried to find a way to oppose
Clinton's plan for the Erie Canal in
1817. Van Buren supported a bill that raised money for the canal
through state bonds, and the bill quickly passed through the
legislature with the help of his Tammany Hall compatriots. In
1817 Van Buren's connection with so-called "machine politics" started.
He created the first political machine encompassing all of New York, the Bucktails,
whose leaders later became known as the Albany Regency.
The
Bucktails became a successful movement that emphasized party
loyalty; they captured and controlled many patronage posts throughout
New York. Van Buren did not originate the system, but gained the
nickname of "Little Magician" for the skill with which he exploited it.
He also served as a member of the state constitutional
convention, where he opposed the grant of universal suffrage and
tried to maintain property requirements for voting. He was
the leading figure in the Albany Regency,
a
group of politicians who for more than a generation dominated much of
the politics of New York and powerfully influenced the politics of the
nation. The group, together with the political clubs such as Tammany Hall that were developing at the
same time, played a major role in the development of the "spoils system",
a
recognized procedure in national, state and local affairs. He was the
prime architect of the first nationwide political party: the Jacksonian
Democrats.
In Van Buren's own words, "Without strong national political
organizations, there would be nothing to moderate the prejudices
between free and slaveholding states." In February 1821,
Martin Van Buren was elected a U.S. Senator
from New York, defeating the incumbent Nathan Sanford who ran as the Clintonian candidate.
Van Buren at first favored internal improvements, such as road repairs
and canal creation, therefore proposing a constitutional amendment in
1824 to authorize such undertakings. The next year, however, he took
ground against them. He voted for the tariff of 1824 then gradually
abandoned the protectionist position, coming out for "tariffs for
revenue only." In the presidential
election of 1824, Van Buren supported William H.
Crawford and
received the electoral vote of Georgia for vice - president,
but he shrewdly kept out of the acrimonious controversy which followed
the choice of John Quincy
Adams as
President. Van Buren had originally hoped to block Adams' victory by
denying him the state of New York (the state was divided between Van
Buren supporters who would vote for William H.
Crawford and
Adams men). However, Representative Stephen Van
Rensselaer swung New
York to Adams and thereby the 1824 Presidency. He recognized early the
potential of Andrew Jackson as a presidential candidate. After
the election, Van Buren sought to bring the Crawford and Jackson
followers together and strengthened his control as a leader in the
Senate. Always notably courteous in his treatment of opponents, he
showed no bitterness toward either John Quincy
Adams or Henry Clay,
and he voted for Clay's confirmation as Secretary of
State, notwithstanding Jackson's "corrupt bargain"
charge. At the same time, he opposed the Adams - Clay plans for
internal
improvements and declined to support the proposal for a Panama
Congress. As chair of the Judiciary Committee, he brought forward a
number of measures for the improvement of judicial procedure and, in
May 1826, joined with Senator Thomas Hart
Benton in
reporting on executive patronage. In the debate on the "tariff of
abominations"
in 1828, he took no part but voted for the measure in obedience to
instructions from the New York legislature, an action which was cited
against him as late as during the presidential
campaign of 1844. Van
Buren was not an orator, but his more important speeches show careful
preparation and his opinions carried weight; the oft repeated charge
that he refrained from declaring himself on crucial questions is hardly
borne out by an examination of his senatorial career. In February 1827,
he
was reelected to the Senate by a large majority. He became one of
the recognized managers of the Jackson campaign, and his tour of Virginia,
the Carolinas,
and Georgia in
the spring of 1827 won support for Jackson from Crawford. Martin Van
Buren sought to reorganize and unify "the old Republican party" behind
Jackson. Van
Buren helped create a popular style of politicking that is often seen
today. At the state level, Jackson's committee chairs would split up
the responsibilities around the state and organize volunteers at the
local level. "Hurra Boys" would plant hickory trees (in honor of
Jackson's nickname, "Old Hickory") or hand out hickory sticks at
rallies. Van Buren even had a New York journalist write a campaign
piece portraying Jackson as a humble, pious man. "Organization is the
secret of victory," an editor in the Adams camp wrote. He once said to
a group of lobbyists the famous quote and "By the want of it we have
been overthrown." In 1828, Van Buren was elected Governor of New
York for the
term beginning on January 1, 1829, and resigned his seat in the Senate. Martin
Van Buren's tenure as New York governor is the second shortest on
record. While his term was short, he did manage to pass the Bank Safety
Act (an early form of deposit insurance). On
March 5, 1829, President Jackson appointed Van Buren Secretary of
State,
an office which probably had been assured to him before the election,
and he resigned the governorship. He was succeeded in the governorship
by his Lieutenant Governor, Enos T. Throop,
a member of the regency. As Secretary of State, Van Buren took care to
keep on good terms with the Kitchen Cabinet,
the group of politicians who acted as Jackson's advisers. He won the
lasting regard of Jackson by his courtesies to Mrs. John H. Eaton (Peggy Eaton),
wife of the Secretary of War,
with
whom the wives of the cabinet officers had refused to associate. He did
not oppose Jackson in the matter of removals from office but was
not himself an active "spoilsman." He skillfully avoided entanglement
in the Jackson-Calhoun imbroglio.
No
diplomatic questions of the first magnitude arose during Van Buren's
service as secretary, but the settlement of long standing claims
against France was prepared and trade with the British West
Indies colonies
was opened. In the controversy with the Bank of the
United States,
he sided with Jackson. After the breach between Jackson and Calhoun,
Van Buren was clearly the most prominent candidate for the
vice presidency. In
December 1829, Jackson had already made known his own wish that Van
Buren receive the nomination. In April 1831, Van Buren resigned from
his secretary of state position as a result of the Petticoat affair
— though he did not leave office until June. Van Buren still played a
part in the Kitchen Cabinet. In
August 1831, he was appointed minister to the Court of St. James's (United Kingdom),
and
he arrived in London in September. He was cordially received, but
in February, he learned that his nomination had been rejected by the
Senate on January 25, 1832. The rejection, ostensibly attributed in
large part to Van Buren's instructions to Louis McLane,
the
American minister to the United Kingdom, regarding the opening of
the West Indies trade, in which reference had been made to the results
of the election of 1828, was the work of Calhoun,
the vice president. When the vote was taken, enough of the majority
refrained from voting to produce a tie and give Calhoun his longed-for
"vengeance." No greater impetus than this could have been given to Van
Buren's candidacy for the vice presidency. After a
brief tour on through Europe, Van Buren reached New York on July 5,
1832. The 1832 Democratic
National Convention,
the party's first and held in May, had nominated him for vice-president
on the Jackson ticket, despite the strong opposition to him which
existed in many states. Van Buren's platform included supporting the
expansion of the naval system. His declarations during the campaign
were vague regarding the tariff and unfavorable to the United States
Bank and to nullification,
but he had already somewhat placated the South by denying the right of
Congress to abolish slavery in the District of
Columbia without
the consent of the slave states. It
took Van Buren and his partisan friends a decade and a half to form the
Democratic Party; many elements, such as the national convention, were
borrowed from other parties. In the election of 1832,
the
Jackson - Van Buren ticket won by a landslide (heavily due to the
fact that Andrew Jackson was a popular war hero). When the election of
1836 came up, Jackson was determined to make Van Buren, his personal
choice, President to continue his legacy. Martin Van Buren's only
competitors in the 1836 election were the Whigs,
who ran several regional candidates in hopes of sending the election to
the House of Representatives, where each state delegation would have
one vote. William Henry Harrison hoped to receive the support of the
Western voters, Daniel Webster had strength in New England, and Hugh
Lawson White had support in the South. Van Buren was unanimously nominated by the 1835 Democratic
National Convention at Baltimore.
He
expressed himself plainly on the questions of slavery and the bank
at the same time voting, perhaps with a touch of bravado, for a bill
offered in 1836 to subject abolition literature
in the mails to the laws of the several states. Van Buren's presidential
victory represented
a
broader victory for Jackson and the party. Van Buren entered the
White House as a fifty-four year old widower with four sons. A famous
quotation of his is "As to my presidency the best two days of my life
were those of my entrance upon the office and my surrender of it".
Martin Van Buren was the first real American politician and was also
the first to use grassroots campaigning in his presidential campaign.
He wanted to make a political party that united the plain republicans
of the north and the planters of the south. Martin
Van Buren announced his intention "to follow in the footsteps of his
illustrious predecessor", and retained all but one of Jackson's
cabinet. Van Buren had few economic tools to deal with the Panic of 1837.
Van
Buren advocated lower tariffs and free trade, and by doing so
maintained support of the South for the Democratic Party. He succeeded
in setting up a system of bonds for the national debt. His party was so
split that his 1837 proposal for an "Independent Treasury" system did
not pass until 1840. It gave the Treasury control of all federal funds
and had a legal tender clause that required (by 1843) all payments to
be made in War, but it further inflamed public opinion on both sides. In
a bold step, Van Buren reversed Andrew Jackson's policies and sought
peace at home, as well as abroad. Instead of settling a financial
dispute between American citizens and the Mexican government by force,
Van Buren wanted to seek a diplomatic solution. In August 1837, Van
Buren denied Texas' formal request to join the United States, again
prioritizing sectional harmony over territorial expansion. In the
case of the ship Amistad,
Van Buren sided with the Spanish
Government to
return the kidnapped slaves. Also, he oversaw the "Trail of Tears",
which involved the expulsion of the
Cherokee, Choctaw, Creek, Chickasaw and Seminole from Georgia, Tennessee, Alabama,
and South Carolina to the Oklahoma
territory. To help secure Florida,
Van Buren also pursued the Second Seminole
War, which had begun while Jackson was in office. The war, which
would prove the costliest of the Indian Wars,
was
highly unpopular in the free states, where it was seen as an
attempt to expand slave territory. Fighting was not resolved until
1842, after Van Buren had left office. In 1839, Joseph Smith,
Jr., the founder of the Latter Day
Saint movement visited
Van Buren to plead for the U.S. to help roughly 20,000 Mormon settlers
of Independence,
Missouri, who were forced from the state during the 1838 Mormon War there. The Governor of
Missouri, Lilburn
Boggs, had issued an executive
order on
October 27, 1838, known as the "Extermination Order". It authorized
troops to use force against Mormons to "exterminate or drive [them]
from the state." In
1839, after moving to Illinois, Smith and his party appealed to members
of Congress and to President Van Buren to intercede for the Mormons.
According to Smith's grandnephew, Van Buren said to Smith, "Your cause
is just, but I can do nothing for you; if I take up for you I shall
lose the vote of Missouri." Van Buren
took the blame for hard times, as Whigs ridiculed him as Martin Van Ruin. Van
Buren's rather elegant personal style was also an easy target for Whig
attacks, such as the Gold Spoon
Oration.
State elections of 1837 and 1838 were disastrous for the Democrats, and
the partial economic recovery in 1838 was offset by a second commercial
crisis in that year. Nevertheless, Van Buren controlled his party and
was unanimously renominated by the Democrats in 1840. The revolt
against Democratic rule led to the election of William Henry
Harrison, the Whig candidate. Though
he did vote against the admission of Missouri as a slave state, and
though he would be the nominated presidential candidate of the Free
Soil Party, an anti-slavery political party, in 1848, there was no
ambiguity in his position on the abolition of slavery during his term
of office. When it came to the issue of slavery in DC and slavery in
the United States, he was against its abolition, and said so in his
Inaugural Address in 1836: "the institution of domestic slavery"... "I
believed it a solemn duty fully to make known my sentiments in regard
to it, and now, when every motive for misrepresentation has passed
away, I trust that they will be candidly weighed and understood." "I
must go into the Presidential chair the inflexible and uncompromising
opponent of every attempt on the part of Congress to abolish slavery in
the District of Columbia against the wishes of the slaveholding States,
and also with a determination equally decided to resist the slightest
interference with it in the States where it exists." On
the expiration of his term, Van Buren retired to his estate, Lindenwald in
Kinderhook, where he planned out his return to the White House. He
seemed to have the advantage for the nomination in 1844; his famous
letter of April 27, 1844, in which he frankly opposed the immediate
annexation of Texas,
though doubtless contributing greatly to his defeat, was not made
public until he felt practically sure of the nomination. In the
Democratic convention, though he had a majority of the votes, he did
not have the two-thirds which the convention required, and after eight
ballots his name was withdrawn. James K. Polk received the nomination
instead. In 1848,
he was nominated by two minor parties, first by the "Barnburner"
faction of the Democrats, then by the Free Soilers,
with
whom the "Barnburners" coalesced. He won no electoral votes, but
took enough votes in New York to give the state — and perhaps the
election — to Zachary Taylor.
In the election of 1860, he voted for the fusion ticket
in New York which was opposed to Abraham Lincoln,
but he could not approve of President
Buchanan's course
in dealing with secession and eventually supported Lincoln. Martin
Van Buren then retired to his home in Kinderhook. After being bedridden
with a case of pneumonia during the fall of 1861, Martin Van Buren died
of bronchial asthma and heart failure at
his Lindenwald estate in Kinderhook at 2:00 a.m. on July 24, 1862. He
was 79 years old. He is buried in the Kinderhook
Cemetery along
with his wife Hannah, his parents, and his son Martin Van Buren, Jr. A cenotaph to him is located
near the parking lot of the Kinderhook
Reformed Dutch Church. Van Buren outlived his four immediate
successors as President (William Henry
Harrison, John Tyler, James K. Polk and Zachary Taylor). |