WWW Wednesday

WHAT have you finished reading recently? Bosom Friends, a book examining the alliance between James Buchanan and William Rufus King, and Zachary Taylor, a biography of President Zachary Taylor. Also, Millard Fillmore by the aptly named Finkleman. I will not review it save for copy-pasting my Goodreads dismissal.

WHAT are you reading now? Arguing until Doomsday, a study of Stephen Douglas’ and Jefferson Davis’ respective roles in the increasing sectional crisis of the 1840s and ’50s. I am also listening to the new full-cast Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone and enjoying it.

WHAT are you reading next? Possibly biographies of Tyler and Polk. I’d considered The Rise and Fall of the Whig Party, but it’s 1300 pages and I don’t think even I am that interested in the Whigs at this moment, even if there’s probably more useful info on Fillmore than in the biography I just finished and washed my hands of. I can’t say I’d expected that the early 19th century presidents would dominate my Hail to the Chief reading, but that’s the joy and peril of being a mood reader.

I will not be reviewing or even short-rounding Finkelman’s biography of Millard Fillmore, who was so shabbily abused by the book that I’m almost compelled to defend him despite his faults. To quote my goodreads review:

This is not a biography, it is character assassination by an alleged biographer. Finkelman opens the book by declaring his intention is to bury Fillmore in the bottom five of American presidents, and everything he writes is to that end. He finds a way to hang a black hat on Fillmore for everything — from his poor upbringing to the fact that Commodore Perry’s fleet arrived in Japan after Fillmore was out of office. The author’s declared bias made me suspicious of his use of evidence & such, and his declaration that Fillmore had refused to assist in the annexation of Hawaii finalized my judgement: the author’s wording makes one think that he is writing about Grover Cleveland decades later, whereas as far as I can tell from background research Fillmore was trying to throw a wrench in France’s attempts to claim Hawaii as theirs. Finkelman is an untrustworthy author, this book is a stain on this entire series, and Schlesinger should be ashamed for having signed off on it.

It looks like December will be history and…mm, pretty much nothing else. I generally begin the year with a variety kickoff, though, so let not your hearts be troubled. Speaking of — this is scheduled to post at midnight on Christmas Eve, and as I did last year I will probably take a break from reading and posting in the days around Christmas. So, Merry Christmas one and all!

“Come in! Come in and know me better, Man!”

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Old Rough and Ready Taylor

When I think of Zachary Taylor, I can see a craggy face right out of a western– and for some reason, I think of cherries. (My adult brain has somehow managed to remember some 25+ years after reading a book of the presidents that his death was tied to gobbling down cherries and milk.) Zachary Taylor was not a politician by inclination or upbringing: he grew up in Kentucky, hearing about his father’s deeds in the American Revolution, and yearned to take his own place in the ranks. In frontier America, Army officers could divide their time between farming and serving in the small camps that dotted the borders between America and Indian country. This Taylor did, though he was always happier in service to the Army. He was involved in both the Black Hawk War and the fight against the Seminoles in Florida, and it was on his watch that hostilities began with Mexico. Taylor’s troops had been ordered to the disputed territory between ‘official’ America and Mexico, and the bellicose tête-à-tête was such that Mexican troops attacked Taylor’s in land that President Polk maintained was DC’s. It was in Mexico that Taylor’s victories against Santa Ana made him a war hero — and a political candidate who was elected despite not having any political experience or expressed political ideas at all.

This is an extremely short biography of a man whose term in office was cut short by a gastrointestinal issue, but it has the advantage of focusing on someone whose professional life was directly involved with two of the rachets up of sectional tension. Not only was Taylor famously involved in the war against Mexico that created pressure for more territories with the potential to disrupt the north-south balance, but it was during his tenure in office that gold rush California made its bid to join the Union tout de suite — as an anti-slave state. There was also a bit of an interstate war between Texas and New Mexico, where militias were mixing it up to press Texas’ claim to Santa Fe. Taylor would take a hard line against this Lone Star tomfoolery, but Texas would again invade New Mexico during the Civil War. Interestingly, his son would serve in the war on the Confederate side, and would unwittingly lead to future historians’ frustrations: Union troops burned Taylor’s son’s home, including all of the president’s papers. Taylor’s death was a genuine lost to the Union: given that he was a Southern Unionist, I wonder what might’ve happened had he been able to exert influence past 1850. Although this book is brief, it is one that offers some insight into how disruptive the Mexican war was, as well as amusing trivia like Taylor being the father-in-law of Jefferson Davis for all of three months, until the woman who united them — Sarah Knox Taylor — died of malaria.

Quotations

At a time when rogues abounded, Wilkinson was unique in the varieties of his villainy. Some officers were treacherous, some were avaricious, and some were simply incompetent. Wilkinson managed to combine all three.

Conditions at camp beggared description. More men were sick than well, and it was impossible to care for all their needs. Sanitation did not exist. Spoiled food, supplied by seedy and frequently corrupt contractors, revolted those who were supposed to eat it. Attempts at burial were pitiful. Interred higgledy-piggledy in shallow graves, the protruding arms and legs of the deceased took the place of missing markers in reminding the living of the fate that might be theirs.

“I am not a party candidate, and if elected, cannot be President of a party, but the President of the whole people.”

“The intense heat, for which Washington is famous, was exacerbated by the humidity. The fill-in soil that exists between the White House and the Potomac today did not exist in 1849, and the White House was close to the marshes at the edge of the river.”

With a straight face, he revealed an incredible blunder, his sending Andrew J. Donelson to Frankfurt am Main as the American minister to the German Empire, only to discover, on Donelson’s arrival, that the German Empire did not exist. Donelson had therefore sent the papers of the legation to Berlin, where the United States had a minister to Prussia.

On April 17, Benton finally lost patience with Foote’s attacks and, when the latter began his usual vituperation, rose and began approaching the Mississippian, who pulled a pistol and retreated down the aisle toward the front of the Senate chamber. Stopped once, Benton then saw the pistol. Rather than retreat, he thrust open his coat and continued in Foot’es direction. “I have no pistols,” he shouted. “Let him fire. Stand out of the way! Let the assassin fire!” Confusion broke loose, but several level-headed senators grasped both men and led them back to their seats.



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Top Ten Titles Most Recently Added to my Goodreads TBR

Today’s treble T is books we hope Santy Clause leaves, or bookish wishes in general.  The compulsory gift-giving is my least favorite part of Christmas, at least when small children aren’t involved – especially when absurd scenarios like adults taking turns giving each other gift cards surfaces. Those things are a scam, in my opinion –  some of them don’t even let you wipe the card, so you have to be careful about what you buy so that you use up as much of the gift amount as you can. Anyhoo, I’m going to list the last ten books I added to my Goodreads wanna-read shelf, starting from most recent and working backwards.    A couple of these were added not by me, but by goodreads when I entered giveaways for them.  I don’t add books to this list often – my mental TBR is bigger and far more hazy – and  it’s funny to look back and see my Roman history mood from the late summer be replaced by a mid-19th century history mood that reigns at present.

But first, a tease!

Tuesday Teaser

When [Stephen Douglas’] mother remarried Gehazi Granger in late 1830, she moved to his upstate New York home, accompanied by seventeen-year-old Stephen, who entered Canandaigua Academy.There, Douglas made lasting friendships rooted in mischief, including furtive poetry recitations enlivened by whiffs of nitrous oxide.

To say that Stephen Douglas lived and breathed politics is to make apt use of a stale cliche. He scheduled his wedding for the narrow window between the 1856 election and the opening of a new session of Congress — after courting his Adele Curtis on the campaign trail. – ARGUING UNTIL DOOMSDAY

(1) The Birth of Modern Politics:  Andrew Jackson, John Quincy Adams,  and the Election of 1828,  Lynn Hudson Parsons

(2)  Arguing Until Doomsday: Stephen Douglas, Jefferson Davis, and the Struggle for American Democracy, Michael E. Wood

(3)  A Generation at War: The Civil War Era in a Northern Community, Nicole Etcheson

(4) Storm Tide, Paul Doiron. (Hey! A non-history title!)

(5)  Blood and Iron: The Rise and Fall of the German Empire, Katja  Hoyer

(6) The Crossroads,  CJ Box.

(7) Fourteenth Colony: The Forgotten Story of the Gulf South During America’s Revolutionary Era , Mike Bunn

(8)  A Rome of One’s Own: The Forgotten Women of the Roman Empire, Emma Southon

(9) Creators, Conquerors, and Citizens: A History of Ancient Greece ,  A. H. Robin Waterfield
(10)  The Eagle and the Lion: Rome, Persia and an Unwinnable Conflict,  Adrian Goldsworthy

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Bosom Friends

James Buchanan remains the United States’  only bachelor president –  he was technically joined in this feat by Cleveland for one term, but by the time 22 had returned as 24, he had found his better half.  Buchanan, though,  despite numerous flirtations and one possible engagement, never fully tied the knot.  In this chronic bachelorhood he was joined for a time by William Rufus King, the son of a prominent  Carolina family who with his brother took early parts in the development of Alabama: King, in fact, founded the town of Selma,  though he remained more interested in national rather than city politics.   Buchanan and King served in Congress together, and lived together.   This has sometimes given speculators in the 21st century cause to wonder if the two weren’t an item together, and exploring that possibility is the ostensible purpose of this book. Readers eager to dive into the romance lives of old men wearing frock coats, however, will be disappointed – just as I was relieved. Instead of being a work of historical gossip, the author instead uses the close friendship and political alliance between Buchanan and King to explore the role of “messes” and personal alliance in the early-mid 19th century. 

When this book first came out, I gave it a wary look:  since William Rufus King is our town founder we should have anything and everything possible on him, but this one struck me at first sight as gossipy and salacious.  My recent Buchanan dive, however, made me look at this one a little more closely, and I found it far more substantive than expected.  Knowing his reader’s expectations, however – having partially set them –  Thomas Balcerski opens the book by looking at the rumors of King and Buchanan’s alleged pairing.  He points out first that the fact that they lived together is absolutely meaningless: in early Washington,   Congressmen often shared boarding houses together, generally in politically-related clumps called “messes”.  This owed in part to the lack of housing in Washington City in general: it was a city still very much being formed.  King and Buchanan’s arrangement was slightly different, as theirs was the self-consciously styled “Bachelor’s Mess”: they were joined by numerous other men through the decade or so that the mess was intact, but the other bachelors had a habit of running off and getting married.  Balcerski also looks at the language used by these men in their letters together, and the dismissive way other men dismissed them as effeminate.   It was not uncommon for politicians to attack one another by accusing them of being effeminate or ladylike; Buchanan, in fact,  would dismiss John Quincy Adams in adjacent language, calling him a “witch”.   The language used in the letters is rather intimate by our reckoning, Balcerski writes,  but not unusual in the context of its times .  While there’s certainly room to read between the lines, ultimately Balcerski maintains there’s no real evidence one way or another.  King swore that he’d fallen in love with the princess of Russia and could not find room in his heart for anyone else, and Buchanan flirted with women throughout his life and was even engaged for a time, though something went sideways and he was not even permitted to follow her funeral train when she died. Both men would devote themselves to their nieces and nephews, and rely on their oldest nieces as personal assistants of a sort: it was Harriet Lane and Catherine Margaret Ellis who retained their uncles’ letters and allow us any insight at all into their 19th century wheeling and dealing.

The majority of the book follows Buchanan and King’s lives in Washington as they made common cause together, at least for the most part. Both would eventually be affiliated with the Democratic party, working for national unity despite sectional rivalries.   I truly did not understand the angst around the Union’s health that pervaded the early 19th century:   between New England threatening to secede in the 1810s, South Carolina threatening and very nearly doing so in the 1820s, and so on,  there’s a salient sense that this experiment in unitive democracy might  and very well could fail. While balances and deals were struck – sometimes involving these men’s input –  the Mexican war sorely unstabled things by adding enormous swathes of land to the United States’ potential for settlement.  King, the conservative southerner, was conservative more in a Kirk sense than we appreciate. He knew full well that adding all those lands would create drama that might  disrupt the tentative peace the South now enjoyed: his northern bestie Buchanan, however, was an eager expansionist, eager  to drive the Stars and Stripes westward to the Pacific.   The ‘mess’ system allowed for political work to be done even outside of Congress, and Buchanan and King would both be rising stars: eventually Buchanan would be tempted by a Supreme Court seat, and be elected president, and King would be elected vice president. His career was tragically cut short by tuberculosis: he died a month into office, and makes me wonder what someone of his even temper would have done during the ‘secession winter’ of 1860 had he lived.

I found a few irritating bits early on, mostly in connection to my local history interests:  Balcerski mentions that King settled near “the new town” of Selma and does this several times before getting around to the fact that King in fact founded said town, choosing its name from the Songs of Ossian. On the whole, though, I enjoyed this: it helps to be in a particular mood for this topic at present, and to be able to read claims made here in the context of other books as I struggle to get a bead on who Buchanan was. This was an altogether different look at 19th century dealmaking and political alliances, and I think the author makes fair use of his contacts without drifting into speculation.

Quotations

The petty squabble altered Buchanan’s previously rosy view of the nature of mankind. His father consoled him with a truism that shaped the outlook of the future politician: “The more you know of mankind the more you will distrust them.”

In one memorable anecdote, Buchanan happened upon Jackson in his private quarters at the White House while the latter was dressed only in shirtsleeves. Young Buck reminded Old Hickory that he was scheduled to receive a visit from a lady and encouraged the president to change into more suitable clothes. After a second such reminder, Jackson supposedly replied, “Mr. Buchanan, I once knew a man in Tennessee who made a large fortune—by minding his own business.”

President Buchanan sent his fourth annual message to Congress on December 3, 1860. At times, the document assumed an almost apocalyptic tone. He meditated at length about the constitutional crisis precipitated by South Carolina’s proposed ordinance of secession and concluded that neither the president nor the Congress possessed the power to enforce the preservation of the Union. “The fact is, that our Union rests upon public opinion,” he declared, “and can never be cemented by the blood of its citizens shed in civil war.”

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Narnia’s audible end: the Silver Chair & the Last Battle

This year I began re-experiencing Narnia through audible’s collection, in large part because I was able to pick up all seven titles with single credit and couldn’t resist. I’ve just finished the last two this month.

Jeremy Northam’s Silver Chair opens with Eustace Scrubb and Jill Pole being plucked into Narnia for reasons known only to the Lion. He informs them that King Caspian’s young son Rilian is missing, and that their orders are to follow four signs and rescue him. Jill and Eustace are full of doubts, fears, and squabbling, and soon they missed several signs and find themselves in deep trouble. Literal deep trouble, as they’re trapped in an underground kingdom ruled by a woman that readers will recognize a the White Witch, but which Eustace and Jill don’t know enough to twig on to. Eventually, they will begin to realize that foul is not fair, and cling to the truth they know to escape. I included some more details in my book review ten years ago. I enjoyed Northam’s narration, especially his Puddleglum, but I’m very partial to Puddleglum regardless.

Jill and Eustace return in The Last Battle, which is positively apocalyptic. Evil reigns in Narnia, and not the ordinary kind who the White Witch embodied. This is a deeper evil: while the Witch did wickedness purely to gratify her own desires — her lust for power, her appetite for cruelty — here the evil is deliberately subversive and transgressive. A malicious ape, Shift, finds the body of a lion and has a marvelous idea: skinning it, he bullies his unwitting donkey friend Puzzle (who is none too bright) into wearing the skin and pretending to be Aslan. Since the great Lion has not been seen in Narnia for centuries, Shift has an idea that he can exploit the awe in which the Lion is held to his own benefit. Sure enough, Shift has soon put himself in power and begins giving all of Narnia the Mordor treatment: stripping its enchanted forests to sell lumber to the Calormen. When Eustace and Jill arrive, they are soon joined by the king, Tirian, and in a desperate battle. In times past, the name Aslan could be used to call for allies: now, however, the name has been subverted. The ape’s claim that his actions — working the talking horses, stripping the forests, etc – – are done in the name of Aslan has so ruined the great lion’s reputation that his name is uttered with fear and loathing instead of awe and adoration. Ultimately, the actions of the aple — inviting the Calormen and their god into Narnia – -will presage the End of Things, and we see every preceding main character but Susan, who had gotten too much into nylons and dresses and was no longer a friend of Narnia. This was voiced superbly by Patrick Stewart, so I loved the presentation.

These two paired well together; not only are they dealing with spiritual subversion of a kind — the Witch gaslighting the children into thinking there is no Overworld, no Narnia, and then the Ape being used to destroy Narnians’ love of Aslan and the Narnia he created — but The Last Battle is very fitting for the Advent season. Advent is not only a season of waiting for Christmas, but waiting for the “Second Advent” — the end of days.

Coming up….another Buchanan biography, only now he’s paired with someone; a Zachary Taylor biography, and a Stephen Douglas v Jeff Davis duel. Will I ever escape the mid-19th century? Stay tuned!

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James “I Didn’t Start the Fire” Buchanan

What do I know about Mr. James Buchanan? Well, he’s our only bachelor president, leaning on his niece to be his hostess at White House functions; he was very chummy with the founder of my hometown, William Rufus King, and supposedly when the South seceded he simply shrugged and said “Yeah, that’s an 1861 problem, not an 1860 problem.” Jean H. Baker argues that Buchanan was by no means passive; he was, in fact, quite an activist — but he acted in favor of his friends, with extreme partiality towards the South, and was so confident in his abilities and self-absorbed in his own desires that he treated his responsibilities toward the country rather shabbily.

There were few men more qualified to serve as president than James Buchanan, Jean Baker declares by way of opening. He had served ably in both houses of Congress for decades and been nominated to the Supreme Court more than once. (He kept withdrawing his name for consideration, desirous of the ultimate prize — the presidency.) And yet his administration is universally regarded as the worst in American history, ending with seven states having seceded from the Union and numerous others on the fence about it. Excoriated in his own lifetime, Buchanan protested that he did take action — he ordered one of the two forts that hadn’t surrendered, Fort Sumter, to be resupplied. So there! And he even made a speech that secession is something we mustn’t do, though — dear me, dear me — there’s nothing to be done about it if you were to happen to secede. Nothing in the Constitution, you see? Never mind that Buchanan had gotten aggressive domestically before, in Kansas — though Baker oddly ignores his actions in Panama, another testament to the fact that Jimmy was no shrinking violet.

Baker attributes Buchanan’s inconsistent actions in office to two things: one, he inculcated the formal, procedural nature of the law into his personality. He was not dynamic, able to roll with the changes, and once he’d rendered a judgment or settled on an opinion there was no changing it. He expected that, the law having been issued, it was The Law. If you wanted to change it, there were ways to do that, but they didn’t involve ignoring the law or subverting it. The Lecompton Constitution, for instance, was a travesty, a mean joke — drawn up by an extreme minority of Kansans and sent to Congress to debate. It was, frankly, unconstitutional, containing measures to persecute the free speech of those who opposed slavery — but Buchanan accepted and endorsed it because the Lecompton legislature which had drawn it up was the officially recognized legislature of Kansas, not the freesoiler one in Topeka.

More importantly, however, was Buchanan’s deep investment in Southern social society. Although he’d been raised with a story that Abe Lincoln would appreciate — born to a poor family that turned hard work into success and thriving businesses — Buchanan was no hardscrabble Yankee. He studied law and was deeply appreciative of his southern friends’ more laid-back approach to life. They too, studied law and practiced it and politics, but they were more men of leisure and arts rather than bank books and real estate speculation. Baker writes that Buchanan found their company deeply attractive — far more so than pushy Puritans. He surrounded himself in the White House by men of the South, and his cabinet remained mostly southern even after South Carolina had seceded and men in other states were actively preparing for their self-defense in case Lincoln decided to take the Andrew Jackson approach to secession.

I half-expected when I began this book to end it viewing Buchanan more sympathetically, as happened with my reading of Franklin Pierce. That was not the case, though it’s not necessarily Baker’s fault even though she was clearly not a fan. There was some bleedover from my reading 1858 at the same time and seeing Buchanan’s obsession with Cuba and pushing around Paraguay, and then seeing him here trying to will the slavery issue away — adding fuel to the fire through such aggressive support, feeding more aggression from abolitionists — he strikes me as a man with the wrong priorities. Being a southerner, I suppose I should like him for his partiality towards the South, but his indulging the plantation elite proved not only immoral, but not in the South’s best interests. It probably would have been best for everyone if Buchanan had accepted earlier offers to join the Supreme Court.

Although Baker is definitely not an impartial biographer, I enjoyed learning about Buchanan’s early life, and this combined with the other two works I was reading gave me a better appreciation of how a duck he truly was. Of the three, this is the best for a survey of his life and work, since 1858 and Bosom Friends are more focused in scope. Given that Bosom Friends focuses on Buchanan’s social life, particularly the “Bachelor’s Mess” he kept with William Rufus King and several other legislators, I’m hoping to end this miniseries within my larger “impending crisis” obsession on a slightly more charitable note. ‘Tis the season.

Quotations

As a loyal member of the Democratic party Buchanan represented one of the few remaining national institutions in the United States when he was elected president. By that time, churches had separated into northern and southern factions; newspapers printed only sectional versions of the events of the day and the new Republican party had no following south of the Mason-Dixon Line. Only the Democracy remained the voice of all the people —North and South.

Buchanan had long since chosen sides. Both physically and politically he had only one farsighted eye, and it looked southward.

Republicans and many northern Democrats considered the invasion of Mexico gross interference in the domestic affairs of another nation. Besides it was illegal to use American troops to invade another nation without a declaration of war by Congress. But the president held Mexico an exception to such constitutional strictures. It was a neighbor whose “anarchy and confusion” affected Americans. “As a good neighbor shall we not extend to her a helping hand to save her?”

Measured against other presidents, even those in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, Buchanan is one of the most aggressive, hawkish chief executives in American history.

Americans have conveniently misled themselves about the presidency of James Buchanan, preferring to classify him as indecisive and inactive. According to historian Samuel Eliot Morison, “He prayed, and frittered and did nothing.” In fact, Buchanan’s failing during the crisis over the Union was not inactivity, but rather his partiality for the South, a favoritism that bordered on disloyalty in an officer pledged to defend all the United States. He was that most dangerous of chief executives, a stubborn, mistaken ideologue whose principles held no room for compromise. His experience in government had only rendered him too self-confident to consider other views. In his betrayal of the national trust, Buchanan came closer to committing treason than any other president in American history.

Throughout the war Buchanan was a good Unionist. He supported the draft, but not the Emancipation Proclamation, and he never publicly criticized what he considered Lincoln’ violations of the Constitution.



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1858

1858 is a history of the second year of James Buchanan’s administration, a year notable less for what Buchanan did than for what he refused to do while the slavery debate burned white-hot. He maintained that slavery was no longer a live issue, having been “settled” by the Dred Scott decision, which declared that neither territorial governments nor Congress could restrict slavery in the West. Married to that conviction, Buchanan turned his attention instead to pining after Cuba, chest-thumping in Paraguay, and quarreling with—and often actively undermining—his own party. Although this book sometimes felt scattered, it has some very strong sections and was wholly diverting even when it appeared off-topic.

Before reading this book, I had assumed Buchanan largely earned his terrible reputation through his paralysis after secession; Chadwick makes clear that this was only one entry in a much longer portfolio of failure. Despite his extensive legislative experience, Buchanan appears to have had little talent for managing people, and by the midterms he had alienated many of those around him. His astonishing December declaration that slavery was no longer a contentious issue only underscores how detached he was from political reality. Buchanan is not the book’s sole focus, however. The rise of Abraham Lincoln receives sustained attention, particularly through the Lincoln–Douglas debates, where Lincoln’s name and political philosophy were established on a national stage. Other pivotal figures appear as well—Lee, Jefferson Davis, William Sherman—but their role in the year’s story feels largely incidental, if often fun in themselves (who would expect the savage Sherman to be an enthusiastic sketcher of birds?).

Although Buchanan claimed to stand on Jeffersonian principles, using them to justify his passivity during the secession crisis, Chadwick argues persuasively that Buchanan was perfectly willing to intervene when it suited him. His response to Paraguay—dispatching a nineteen-ship fleet to demand compensation after an American vessel was fired upon for allegedly trespassing on the Paraná River—was anything but restrained. While Buchanan may have hoped to focus on foreign policy, particularly on acquiring Cuba, the book reveals just how close the country was drifting toward catastrophe and how foolish the president was to turn a blind eye. (Literally, in Buchanan’s case — he had terrible eye trouble.) Kansas was the key: after years of bloody fighting between pro-slavery and anti-slavery factions, the pro-slavery faction attempted to impose a state constitution so radically pro-slavery that even criticizing the institution was a crime. It was so extreme, in fact, that Buchanan’s own pro-slavery territorial governor resigned in protest—and despite Buchanan’s endorsement, the proposed constitution was ultimately rejected by both Congress and the people of Kansas.

This was an eye-opening reading. While the main goal for me was to learn more about Buchanan, I enjoyed meeting the other historical figures and seeing their human side — Sherman’s art, Lee’s desire to leave the Army to tend to his wife’s health, etc — and learning about the Lincoln-Douglas debates and the scope of Buchanan’s failures was tremendously educational. Buchanan’s effective sabotage of his own party was among the most striking revelations of the book. He was not merely ineffective, but actively corrosive, alienating allies, enforcing ideological loyalty, and expending political capital on foreign fixations while the country steamed toward crisis. What continues to baffle me is why a Pennsylvanian with no economic ties to slavery was, throughout his career, one of the vile institution’s most reliable defenders — but that may be the subject of another book. Buchnanan appears to be a man so obsessed with scoring foreign policy wins, especially expanding DC’s influence into Latin America, that he was willing to sweep the obvious domestic crisis under a rug and declare he’d made a clean sweep of it. Can you imagine a president ignoring fundamental domestic issues, alienating allies, and being obsessed with expanding American power in Latin America today?

Coming up next: um, more Buchanan. I’m nearly done with a formal biography of Buchanan (my WWW made me a liar, I assumed I’d be done when I scheduled it a few days ago), and I’m plowing through a joint biography of Buchanan and William Rufus King in a book that examines the role of Congressional “messes” — boardinghouse arrangments that had solons living together in the early days of Washington — had on legislation and alliances.

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WWW Wednesday

WHAT have you finished reading recently? James Buchanan, Jean H. Baker.

WHAT are you reading now? Bosom Friends: The Intimate World of James Buchanan and Willliam Rufus King, Thomas Balcerski, and 1858 by Bruce Chadwick

WHAT are you reading next? Probably one of my Stephen Douglas-related histories.

Arguing until Doomsday: Stephen Douglas, Jefferson Davis, and the Struggle for American Democracy, Michael Woods

Year of Meteors: Stephen Douglas, Abraham Lincoln, and the Election that Brought on the Civil War, Douglas Egerton

Chorus of the Union: How Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas Set Aside Their Rivalry to Save the Nation, Edward McClelland.

Yes, I am in a strange reading frenzy at the moment, solidly locked in to the two decades preceding the Civil War. On the bright side, it’s corrected that appalling lead fiction gained over nonfiction back when CJ Box hijacked my reading year.

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The Expatriation of Franklin Pierce

“Some men are so constituted that they do not incline to bow before a storm.”

Continuing in the tragedy of Franklin Pierce, I chose to follow a short biography of him with this, a more focused look Pierce’s exit from the presidency, when he found himself wholly isolated. Four years ago, he had earned a record for most electoral votes gathered in any preceding election: he left office as the ‘leader’ of a party so split over slavery that it was soon to be ruined, hated by many. When the Civil War began, he was agonized: a lover of the Union, he nontheless believed the Republicans firmly in the wrong. Their continual attacks on Southern institutions that could not easily change, institutions that the South’s leading men were deeply invested in, had accelerate this crisis. He was also intimate friends with Jefferson and Varina Davis, and despite his preference for the Union could not in good conscience declare Davis a traitor the way so many who did not know the man did. A sympathetic letter to Davis would be intercepted and widely published in the North so that those who feast upon ‘the news’ and wax in self-righteous vitriol could declare him a traitor.

During the war, Pierce’s wife would die, as would one of his best friends Nathaniel Hawthorne — but such was the contempt northerners now held Pierce in that he was not even allowed to be a pallbearer at the funeral, relegated instead to sit and observe. As the war progressed, he would do more than sit: he would begin speaking out against Lincoln’s abuses of civil liberties, almost embracing the scorn levied on him by the war’s more ardent supporters. He did this at no small risk to himself, at a time when other men were being exiled or indeed even hung for the same ‘crime’. He had become a man without a country, loyal to a Union that had now transformed itself into something he no longer recognized. He was almost nearly friendless, too, removed from the Davises by the exigencies of war and then later prison. After the war, he would discreetly labor in behalf of Davis’ release from prison: fortunately for the former Southern president, the North had engaged in such an orgy of hangings after the murder of Lincoln that their appetite for blood was satiated and no one quite knew what to do with their stoic Mississippi prisoner. Tellingly, the Union government never formally tried Davis for treason, for fear that the case for secession might fare better in the courts of law than on the battlefield.

This was a winsome little book, giving Franklin Pierce a proper stage as a tragic figure. How complex a character he was, and his times — to stand for the principles of the Union, and in so doing, be accused of being a traitor to the Union. Pierce has proven quite the surprise; while he was perhaps not the man the hour demanded, in these biographies I have found him a man of conscience and compassion, dedicated to his friends and his principles and cheerfully willing to suffer slander in their cause. If I ever find myself up in New Hampshire I may have to pay my respects.

Quotations

Just weeks before the end of his term, upon learning that Varina Davis was ill and by herself with her new-born son at the Davis apartment on 14 and F streets, Pierce headed out by himself into a January blizzard with snow gusts waist-high to check on her. When a grateful Varina later asked why he had not simply sent a White House servant or two, Pierce remarked that “they would have no personal interest to urge them on.”

“I have no prejudice against the Southern people,” Lincoln declared, in one of his many nicely-composed phrases. “They are just what we would be in their situation. If slavery did not exist amongst them, they would not introduce it. If it did now exist amongst us, we should not instantly give it up.”

Alexander H. Stephens, foreseeing what he thought would by the cataclysmic results of a Lincoln victory [in May 1860], was much more certain: “In less than twelve months we shall be in the midst of a bloody war. What is to become of us then God only knows.”

Lincoln’s usurpation of power that was clearly not delegated to him by the constitution would have many ramifications: throughout the summer and fall of 1861 thousands of citizens, some guilty of nothing more than criticizing the president, were rounded up and thrown behind bars, usually charged with treason or sedition. They were writers, political activists, judges, and lawmakers.But in many other cases they were nothing more than simple American citizens.

In Washington, Chandler was regarded as something of a comical figure largely because everything he did had come to seem so predictable. This made him good for jokes that he did not appreciate. When Chandler dramatically declared he would join the Comanche Nation if the North permitted the South to secede, Texas Senator Louis T. Wigfall, unable to resist, responded “God forbid! I hope not. They [the Comanches] have already suffered much from their contact with the whites.” Everyone but Chandler laughed in response.

Yet despite his alarm over the course the country was taking under Lincoln, Pierce could never wean himself of a love for the United States itself. Polishing off a bottle of rum with Nathaniel Hawthorne in late January, Pierce remained convinced that the American experiment could still work: “He is bigoted to the Union,” Hawthorne said of Pierce, “and sees nothing but ruin without it.”

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“I don’t quite understand what we are fighting for, or what definite result can be expected,” the author had confided to Horatio Bridge in May of 1861 as the towns of his native New England were awash in red, white, and blue bunting and endless military parades. “If we pummel the South ever so hard, they will love us none the better for it,” Hawthorne continued, before revealing that—unlike Pierce—he wasn’t all that excited about maintaining the Union in the first place. “And even if we subjugate
them [the South], our next stop should be to cut them adrift.”

There could be no denying that Davis was deficient in political skills. Varina perhaps summed up the problem best when she said her husband “did not know the arts of the politician and would not practice them if understood.” Yet it was also true that Davis faced an almost impossible task as the commander in chief of a nation that had not even existed the month before he became president. Suddenly he was the head of a national government that had no existing or functioning bureaucracy, institutional memory, or executive precedents. And just to make his burden even more absurd, it was a government that was also at war with a far more powerful, rich, and populous opponent capable of recruiting more soldiers, producing far larger amounts of war materiel, and getting it to the front lines more efficiently on a vast network of rail lines.

In Lincoln’s wake something dark and forbidding swept over the country. At Fort Jefferson, Florida, soldiers turned on one of their own who said he was glad Lincoln had been shot and hung him. “I honestly confess that I have very little sympathy for him or any man who is not punished for similar expressions,” a fellow soldier remarked. Enraged crowds seeking to avenge the president’s murder ransacked the offices of the San Francisco Union and San Francisco American, both of which papers had been generally anti-administration. In Maryland, the editor of the Westminster Democrat was killed for unwisely running a column critical of the deceased president.

And now he stood on a wet night before a mob composed of boys old enough to know anger, but too young to understand much of anything else, and had to defend who he was.

But if critics thought Holt was too severe and unbending, it didn’t really matter. He only had to please one person, and that person was the president. And Lincoln was very happy with him, particularly after suspending the writ of habeas corpus and giving to Holt the responsibility—for the first time in U.S. history—of conducting military trials for civilian political prisoners. It was in this capacity that Holt oversaw the treason conviction of Pierce ally Clement Vallandigham as well as Indiana peace activist Lambdin P. Mulligan, who was sentenced to death; convictions that Lincoln himself reviewed and signed off on.

Then he added a sentence that could have, in the end, served as an epitaph for his entire career, but most certainly for his years as a lone voice of dissent in Lincoln’s America: “Some men are so constituted,” Pierce said, “that they do not incline to bow before a storm.”

“I can appreciate his ability, integrity and agreeable social qualities,” Sherman finally concluded of a man he rarely socialized with in the 1850s, adding: “and only regret that he was President of the United States at a time when the sagacity of a Jefferson, the determined courage of a Jackson, or the shrewdness and wisdom of a Lincoln were needed to meet the difficulties and dangers which he had to encounter.”

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Top Ten Books On my “Winter” TBR

Today’s treble-T is books we think we will be reading this winter. As I did in summer and fall, I want to first look back at the prior quarter’s TBR predictions and see how I did. I did….poorly. Of the ten books I listed, I read exactly one, Against the Machine by Paul Kingsnorth. That does not give me great confidence in the next list I post, so I am going to lean into my current strange reading mood — the history of the sectional division that led to the Civil War, very Christmassey — and post ten titles that are on my immediate-interest list in that vein. I am afraid things look poor indeed for the science survey. But first, a tease!

Buchanan heatedly reminded Douglas that he would suffer harsh consequences if he broke with the administration on Kansas. He reportedly told him of two Democratic senators who had opposed Andrew Jackson twenty years earlier. “Mr. Douglas, I desire you to remember that no Democrat has ever yet differed from the administration of his own choice without being crushed. Remember the fate of Tallmadge and Rives.”
Douglas looked back at him and said chillingly, “I wish you to remember that General Jackson is dead, sir.” 1858, Bruce Chadwick

seriously, this is my browsing history at amazon at the moment. A science book, two gag gifts, and then 1830s-1860s American history.

Ten TBR Titles If My Current Mood Persists

(1) 1858: Abraham Lincoln, Jefferson Davis, Robert E. Lee, Ulysses S. Grant and the War They Failed to See, Bruce Chadwick.

(2) James Buchanan, Jean H. Baker.

(3) Arguing until Doomsday: Stephen Douglas, Jefferson Davis, and the Struggle for American Democracy, Michael Woods

(4) Lincoln and the Decision for War, Russell McClintock. Covers the ‘secession winter’ of 1860-1861 and the outbreak of hostilities in April ’61.

(5) Bleeding Kansas: Contested Liberty in the Civil War Era, Nicole Etscheson. And by “contested liberty”, we mean “two different state governments and lots of murder between people fighting over slavery

(6) Year of Meteors: Stephen Douglas, Abraham Lincoln, and the Election that Brought on the Civil War, Douglas Egerton

(7) Lincoln vs Davis: War of the Presidents, Nigel Hamilton. Looks at how each executive performs, I think.

(8) Chorus of the Union: How Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas Set Aside Their Rivalry to Save the Nation, Edward McClelland.

(9) Clouds of Glory: The Life and Legend of Robert E. Lee, Michael Korda

(10) And Then There Was Light: Lincoln and the American Struggle, Jon Meacham

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