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US Presidents

United States Presidents

Zachary Taylor,
1849 - 1850

Twelfth  President
Whig
Vice President - 
Millard Fillmore
Born: November 24, 1784
Barboursville, Virginia
Occupation: Soldier
Married Sarah Childress
Died: July 9, 1850
Washington, D. C. 

Early Years:  Taylor had little or no formal education, except for a small school in Louisville, Kentucky.  He worked on his father's plantation until he was 23.  He won notoriety as an Indian fighter and became a national hero in the war against Mexico in 1846. 

His Presidency:  The nation was in crisis over slavery, and Taylor opposed a compromise in the face of Southern threats of secession (to leave the Union).  The chief accomplishment of his administration was the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty with Great Britain, guaranteeing that neither Britain nor the U. S. would have exclusive control over any future canal through Central America.  

His Life:  Northerners and Southerners disputed sharply whether the territories wrested from Mexico should be opened to slavery, and some Southerners even threatened secession. Standing firm, Zachary Taylor was prepared to hold the Union together by armed force rather than by compromise.

Born in Virginia in 1784, he was taken as an infant to Kentucky and raised on a plantation. He was a career officer in the Army, but his talk was most often of cotton raising. His home was in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and he owned a plantation in Mississippi.

But Taylor did not defend slavery or southern sectionalism; 40 years in the Army made him a strong nationalist.

He spent a quarter of a century policing the frontiers against Indians. In the Mexican War he won major victories at Monterrey and Buena Vista.

President Polk, disturbed by General Taylor's informal habits of command and perhaps his Whiggery as well, kept him in northern Mexico and sent an expedition under Gen. Winfield Scott to capture Mexico City. Taylor, incensed, thought that "the battle of Buena Vista opened the road to the city of Mexico and the halls of Montezuma, that others might revel in them."

"Old Rough and Ready's" homespun ways were political assets. His long military record would appeal to northerners; his ownership of 100 slaves would lure southern votes. He had not committed himself on troublesome issues. The Whigs nominated him to run against the Democratic candidate, Lewis Cass, who favored letting the residents of territories decide for themselves whether they wanted slavery.

In protest against Taylor the slaveholder and Cass the advocate of "squatter sovereignty," northerners who opposed extension of slavery into territories formed a Free Soil Party and nominated Martin Van Buren. In a close election, the Free Soilers pulled enough votes away from Cass to elect Taylor.

Although Taylor had subscribed to Whig principles of legislative leadership, he was not inclined to be a puppet of Whig leaders in Congress. He acted at times as though he were above parties and politics. As disheveled as always, Taylor tried to run his administration in the same rule-of-thumb fashion with which he had fought Indians.

Traditionally, people could decide whether they wanted slavery when they drew up new state constitutions. Therefore, to end the dispute over slavery in new areas, Taylor urged settlers in New Mexico and California to draft constitutions and apply for statehood, bypassing the territorial stage.

Southerners were furious, since neither state constitution was likely to permit slavery; Members of Congress were dismayed, since they felt the President was usurping their policy-making prerogatives. In addition, Taylor's solution ignored several acute side issues: the northern dislike of the slave market operating in the District of Columbia; and the southern demands for a more stringent fugitive slave law.

In February 1850 President Taylor had held a stormy conference with southern leaders who threatened secession. He told them that if necessary to enforce the laws, he personally would lead the Army. Persons "taken in rebellion against the Union, he would hang ... with less reluctance than he had hanged deserters and spies in Mexico." He never wavered.

Then events took an unexpected turn. After participating in ceremonies at the Washington Monument on a blistering July 4, Taylor fell ill; within five days he was dead. After his death, the forces of compromise triumphed, but the war Taylor had been willing to face came 11 years later. In it, his only son Richard served as a general in the Confederate Army.


Did you know?  His old horse, Whitey, was pastured on the White House lawn where visitors would take horsehairs as souvenirs. 

Quotations

"The power given by the Constitution to the Executive to interpose his veto is a highly conservative power: but in my opinion it should never be exercised except in cases of clear violation of the Constitution, or manifest haste and want of due consideration by Congress."

- Zachary Taylor (1848)

"The idea that I should become President seems to me too visionary to require a serious answer. It has never entered my head, nor is it likely to enter the head of any other person."

- Zachary Taylor
(Two years prior to his nomination for president)

"Upon its preservation [the United States] must depend our own happiness and that of countless generations to come. Whatever dangers may threaten it, I shall stand by it and maintain it in its integrity to the full extent of the obligations imposed and the power conferred upon me by the Constitution."

- Zachary Taylor  (1849)

"I will be damned if another daughter of mine shall marry into the Army. I know enough of the family life of officers. I scarcely know my own children or they me. I have no personal objections to Lieutenant [Jefferson] Davis."

- Zachary Taylor

"A military education will be but of little service . . . unless practice be blended with theory."

- Zachary Taylor

". . . I can and shall yield to no call that does not come from the spontaneous action and free will of the nation at large and void of the slightest agency of my own . . . In no case can I permit myself to be a candidate of any part, or yield myself to any party schemes."

- Zachary Taylor

"It would be judicious to act with magnanimity towards a prostrate foe."

- Zachary Taylor

"I wish my plantation and servants kept together for ten years, and after paying the several legacies referred to, the net proceeds of my crops to be equally divided between my two daughters . . . I wish the servants only moderately worked and kindly treated, and the old ones taken care of and made comfortable, which I hope my children have attended to. . . . I give my daughter Mary Elizabeth, . . . the servant woman Mary, a slave for life, . . . and her four children, forever, to dispose of as she may think proper."

- Zachary Taylor

"For more than half a century, during which kingdoms and empires have fallen, this Union has stood unshaken. The patriots who formed it have long since descended to the grave; yet still it remains, the proudest monument to their memory. . . . In my judgment, its dissolution would be the greatest of calamities. . . . Upon its preservation must depend our own happiness and that of countless generations to come. Whatever dangers may threaten it, I shall stand by it and maintain it in its integrity to the full extent of the obligations imposed and the power conferred upon me by the Constitution."

- Zachary Taylor

"Tell him to go to hell."

- Zachary Taylor
(His reply to Mexican General Santa Anna's demand for surrender)

"As American freemen we cannot but sympathize in all efforts to extend the blessings of civil and political liberty, but at the same time we are warned by the admonitions of history and the voice of our beloved Washington to abstain from entangling alliances with foreign nations."

- Zachary Taylor
(March 5, 1849, his inaugural address)

 

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