John Bell (Tennessee politician)

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John Bell (Tennessee politician) bigraphy, stories - American lawyer and politician

John Bell (Tennessee politician) : biography

February 18, 1796 – September 10, 1869

John Bell (February 18, 1796September 10, 1869) was an American politician, attorney, and plantation owner. One of Tennessee’s most prominent antebellum politicians,Jonathan Atkins, "," Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture, 2009. Retrieved: 10 October 2012. he served in the House of Representatives from 1827 to 1841, and in the Senate from 1847 to 1859. He was Speaker of the House for the 23rd Congress (1834–1835), and briefly served as Secretary of War during the administration of William Henry Harrison (1841). In 1860, he ran for president as the candidate for the Constitutional Union Party, a third party which took a neutral stance on the issue of slavery.

Initially an ally of Andrew Jackson, Bell turned against Jackson in the mid-1830s and aligned himself with the Whig Party, a shift which earned him the nickname, "The Great Apostate.", by James Knox Polk, Volume 6 (1842-1843), page 17, by Paul Finkelman and Martin J. Hershock, 2008, page 52 He consistently battled Jackson’s allies, namely James K. Polk, over issues such as the national bank and the election spoils system. Following the death of Hugh Lawson White in 1840, Bell became the acknowledged leader of Tennessee’s Whigs.

Although a slaveowner, Bell was one of the few southern politicians to oppose the expansion of slavery in the 1850s, and campaigned vigorously against secession in the years leading up to the American Civil War. During his 1860 presidential campaign, he argued that secession was unnecessary since the Constitution protected slavery, an argument which resonated with voters in border states, helping him capture the electoral votes of Tennessee, Kentucky and Virginia. After the Battle of Fort Sumter in April 1861, Bell abandoned the Union cause and supported the Confederacy.

Presidential candidacy

Annoyed by the continuous sectional strife in the Senate, Bell had pondered forming a third party to attract moderates from both the North and South throughout the 1850s. By 1859, the Know Nothing movement had collapsed, but Tennessee’s Whigs had organized themselves into the Opposition Party, which had won several of the state’s congressional seats. Several of this party’s supporters, among them Knoxville Whig editor William Brownlow, former vice presidential candidate Andrew Jackson Donelson, and California attorney Balie Peyton, urged Bell to run for president on a third party ticket.

In May 1860, disgruntled ex-Whigs and disenchanted moderates from across the country convened in Baltimore, where they formed the Constitutional Union Party. The party’s platform was very broad, and made no mention of slavery. While there were several candidates for the party’s presidential nomination, the two frontrunners were Bell and Sam Houston. On May 9, Bell led the initial round of balloting with 68 votes to Houston’s 59, with more than a dozen other candidates splitting the remainder. Houston’s military endeavors had brought him national renown, but he reminded the convention’s Clay Whigs of their old foe Andrew Jackson. On May 10, Bell received 138 votes to Houston’s 69, and was declared the candidate. Edward Everett received the vice presidential nomination.

While Bell had supporters throughout the Northern states and the border states, most of his Northern allies had thrown their support behind Republican candidate Abraham Lincoln or Democratic candidate Stephen A. Douglas. He had little support south of the border states, where Democratic candidate John C. Breckinridge was the clear frontrunner. Southern Democratic newspapers slammed him as a friend of abolitionists and Republicans. The Nashville Union, referring to the Constitutional Union Party’s noncommitted platform, derided Bell as "Nobody’s man," who "stands on nobody’s platform." Bell also struggled with the youth vote, being more than a decade older than the next oldest candidate, Lincoln.

Seeing little chance of winning the election outright, Bell hoped that none of the three other candidates would get the required number of electoral votes, and the election would be sent to the House of Representatives, where he would be chosen as a compromise as the only non-sectional candidate. Neither he nor Everett campaigned extensively.