UCSB LIBKAKY SKETCHES OF THE LIVES FRANKLIN PIERCE AND WM. R. KING, CANDIDATES OP THE DEMOCRATIC REPUBLICAN PARTY PRESIDENCY AND VICE PRESIDENCY THE UNITED STATES. [The Democratic National Convention which assembled at Baltimore on the second day of June, 1852, unanimously nominated General Franklin Pierce as the democratic caudi- -date for the presidency and the Hon. William R. King for the vice presidency of the United States. Whatever pertains to their personal and political history has become a anatter of pervading and peculiar interest. To place before the public, without eulogy or ornament, the leading incidents of their lives, the National Democratic Executive Committee present the following brief and authentic sketches. Their high honor, unimpeachable integrity, eminent statesmanship, and unsurpassed fidelity in the varied public trusts and duties assigned to them, commend them to the generous confidence and support of all who desire an able and honest administration of the gov- ernment. ] FRANKLIN PIERCE. ' General Pierce is the sou of Benjamin Pierce, v/lio Ibught at Banker Hill, served honorably through tlie revolutionary war, was a member of the governor's council, high sheritl' of his county, governor of New HampEhire in 1S27 and 1829, and died April 1, ] 839, aged SI years. He possessed great force of character and knowledge of men, v/as a thorough republican, was highly res]iccted by all parties, and exercised a large iiifluence on public affairs. On the conclusion oi the revolutionary ■war he i^etfJcd in HiUiborough, which then was almost a wildenioss. ^ .' riH'rMy^^- 6 J I? He married twirhic]i was pronounced "a masterly analysis," sound in its principle and construction, and thorough in its business details. His speech on the Florida war, also, was commended as a dignified vindica- tion of the administration against the party assaults that had been made on it. " New Hampshire," said the Boston Post, (June 19, ] S40,) " has just cause of pride in her youthful senator. To a grace and modesty of manner which always attract when he addresses the Senate, he has added severe application to business, and a (borough knowledge of his subject in all its relations; and hence it is, though one of the youngest, he is one of the most influeniial in the distinguished body of which he is a member. Without seeking popularity as a debater, Mr. Pierce, in the quiet and untiring pursuit of public duty, ind the conscientious dis- charge of private responsibility, has acquired a permanent reputation, which places him among the most useful and efficient public men in tlie country. Long may he enjoy it." In 1810 the presidential contest occurred that resulted in the election of General Harrison as President. General Pierce engaged in this struggle with his characteristic zeal and energy; and his services were much sought for, and were freely given. Though others of the sons of the Granite State, and its press, were equally zea'oiis, yet it was owing much to his large personal influence that the State remained firm when other democratic States yielded to the storm. Tiiough a change of rulers was effected, 'yet the financial policy upon whicli t!ie democratic party stood remains unchanged, and is now daily vindicating itselt by its quiet, beneficent, and eflicient action. It was after such a contest, in wln'ch might tumporarily prevailed over right — in which, so far as platforms were concerned on the whig side, all was loose, indefinite, uncommittal, excepting only the generous promise of better times, and on the democratic side were the frankest declaration of principles and baldest discussion of policy — that Mr. Pierce re-entered the Senate at the extra session called by President Harrison. Then New- Hampshire made herself heard and felt in a way that drew towards her the eyes of the whole country. Mr. Pierce's colleague was Levi "Woodbury, fresli from the Treasury Department, with a large financial experience, ready statistics, and great analytical ability. Mr. Pierce was chagrined at the unfair manner in which his party had been overthrown. Democrats in that body were in a minority, and, it is not unjust to add, in the presence of a dictatorial and overbearing majority, more willing to act tlian to defend their action. The debates of this extra session speak for themselves. Levi Wood- bury not merely refuted the electioneering financial statements of whig orators, but most successfully encountered all who attempted to controvert liim; and it is not too much to say that there was no match, on financial points, for him in the Senate, and he absolutely Waterlooed his antago- nists. Franklin Pierce was not behind his colleague, and did not hesitate to encounter even Mr. Webster in the debates. On one occasion he occupied the morning hour of three days (.Tune 30, July 1 and 2, 1S41) in a speech characterized by such a scathing exhibition of facts, such closeness of reasoning, such force of eloquence, as to render it one fit to be made in such a body. This effort on removals from office was warmly commended and widely circulated by democratic journals. And if figures in tlie hands of Woodbury mad<; havoc with the fancy financial statements of whig leaders, professions as to proscribing proscription, com- pared with the facts of the removals from office, in the hands of Pierce they made a most discreditable exhibit of whig partisan tactics. "That removals," he exclaimed, " have occurred, is not the thing of which I complain; I complain of your hypocrisy. I charge that your press and your leading orators made promises to the nation which they did not intend to redeem, and which they now vainly attempt to cover up by cobwebs." In IS'12 Mr. Pierce had served nine years in Congress. He was one of the youngest men who have held a seat in either branch, having at- tained but little more than the constitutional age when he took his seat both in the House and the Senate ; and yet his bearing was such as to 8 have made its mark on the public men of the time. Gestlemen of all parties bear willing testimony to the high sense of honor, the general utility, the unvarying courtesy, that marked his course. He won the reputation — and it is no small one — of being a valuable member of both branches — prompt in attending to the business of his committees, with real work in him, and with great debating talent to present his case clearly and efficiently. This sort of labor makes but little show ; but it is most useful and valuable to a constituency and the country. His rep- utation at that time as a man is thus concisely given in a recent Wash- ington letter, addressed to the editor of the " Puritan," a religipus paper. The writer says : " Of Franklin Pierce I cannot do otherwise than speak well ; for it happened to me, during a short term of official service in Bowdoin Col- lege, during the presidency of Dr. Allen, to know him as a scholar there, and, while resident in this region, to know him as a senator. A very frank, gentlemanly, unobtrusive man is he, strongly devoted to his po- litical principles, kind and constant in his friendships, venerating the institutions of religion, and, while living here, attended upon the most evangelical preaching in the city." It would be easy to present columns of Mr. Pierce's speeches. These, together with his votes, present him as a politician of the Virginia school,, in favor of an economical administration of the general government, of a. strict construction of the constitution, and as a republican of the Jeffer- sonian cast. They present him as one who has uniibrmly acted accord- ing to fixed principles, swerving neither for sympathy nor friendship nor interest from the constitutional path, but, under the guidance of Ihisy honestly and fearlessly performing his public duties. They show him to be thoroughly identified with the principles and measures of the great party which, for so many years since the adoption of the present frame of government, has successfully, in peace and war, carried the country on- ward and upward. Mr. Pierce's various speeches on the abolitioii question, commencing- when fifst a member of the House, and continuing almost to the close of his senatorial term, v.ill serve to give his views on the living questioa now before the country. On this point he has pursued but one course, and it has always been decided and frank. He has declared from the- first that he regarded the schemes of the abolitionists mad and fanatical, and prejudicial in their consequences to all sections of the Union. H& avowed that no valuable end could be gained by an agitation of the sub- ject in Congress ; and when petitions poured in, asking for the abolition of slavery in the District of Columbia, he was frank to oppose the prayer of the petitioners. This object was but their opening door. He declared it to be impossible to read a single number of leading abolition periodicals without perceiving that their object stopped at no point short of emanci- pation in the States. Now, Congress liad no constitutional power to in- terfere with slavery in the States; consequently Mr. Pierce said, in 1838^ " The citizen of New Hampshire is no more responsible, morally or politically, for the existence and continuance of this domestic institution in Virginia or Maryland, than he would be for the existence of any similar institution in France or Persia. Why ? Because these are matters over which the States, respectively, when delegating a portion of their powerSj'to be exercised by the general government, retained tlie whole and exclusive control, and for which they are alone responsible. " Now let these doctrines be universally understood and admitted, and you take one great step towards satisfying the consciences of honest but misguided people in one section of the country, and quieting the irrita- tion, for which there has been too much cause, in the other." Again, in 1S40, he thus expressed his views on this subject: " I do earnestly hope that every honest man who has sincerely at his heart the best interests of the slave and the master, may no longer be governed by a blind zeal and impulse, but be led to examine this subject,, so full of delicacy and danger in all its bearings; and that \yhen called upon to lend their names and influence to the cause of agitation, they may remember that we live under a written constitution, whicli is the panoply and protection of the South as well as the North; that it covers the whole Union, and is equally a guarantee for the unmolested enjoy^ ment of the domestic institution in all its parts; and I trust, further, that they will no longer close their eyes to the fact, that so far as those in whose welfare they express so nmch feeling are concerned, this foreign interference has been, and must inevitably continue to be, evil, and only evil." Once more: In 1841 he raised his voice against the policy which,, under the rule of the whig Seward men of the day, rewarded the aboli- tion faction with public confidence and emolument, and thus held out to them not only encouragement, but urgent stimulants to persevere in their incendiary measures. And in eloquent notes of warning he pre- dicted that, although the public mind was not then agitated on this subject, the repose would prove illusory; that there was below the surface a profound movement, receiving new impulses, that would ere long shake the Union to its centre; and lie declared then that it was his pride and pleasure to be associated with such a party as existed in New Hampshire,, which had with one voice and one heart been in favor of putting down this politico-religious fanaticism, and been against any interference with the rights secured to the States by the constitution. In 1S42 Mr. Pierce resigned his seat in the Senate, in the following; letter: Washington, Feljnianj 2S, 1842. Sir: Having informed the governor of New Hampshire that on this day my seat in tlie Senate of the United States would become vacant by resig- nation, I have thought proper to communicate the fact to you and the Senate. In severing the relations that have so long subsisted between the gen- tlemen with v/hom I have been associated, my feeling of pain and regret will readily be appreciated by those who know that, in all my intercourse during the time I have been a member of the body, no unpleasant occur- rence has ever taken place to disturb for a ihoment my agreeable relations with any individual senator. With a desire for the peace and happiness of you all, for which noW;, in the fullness of my heart, I find no forms of expression, I have the honor to be, with the highest consideration, your obedient servant, FRANK. PIERCE. Hon. Samuel L. Southard, Pre^idoit of tlie Senate. 10 The following is General Pierce's letter of resignation addressed to the governor, referred to: Washington, February 16, 1842. Sir: Circumstances interesting chiefly to myself, and with which, of ■course, I shall not trouble my constiuienfs, have induced me to resign my seat in the United States Senate. My resignation is herewith tendered^ to take effect from and after the 2Sth instant. I may be permitted barely to remark, that having been called to public iife by a constituency to whom 1 shall nevei- cease to feel profoundly grateful, soon after I became of age, and having been continuously in their service from that period to the present, I feel the need of the quiet which can only be enjoyed by the private citizen, and the necessity of attending to my pergonal aftairs and piofessional pursuits. Those who have extended to me a friendship always warm, and a confidence that has never faltered, will clieerfuUy excuse ine, especially as they have better and abler men to take my place. 1 should, however, be mortified to believe that he who shall succeed me, either by ^-our appointment or by the voice of the representative body of the people, will bring to the public service a more anxious desire to maintain the honor of our beloved State, or a more determined purpose truly to represent not only the inter- ests but the spirit of her intelligent and gallant people. I have the honor to be, with high consideration, your excellency's obe- dient servant, FRANK. PIERCE. His Excellency John P.-vcje, Haverhill, N. II. Thus did a young man only thirty-seven years of age voluntarily resign one of the higliest and the most honorable offices in the gift of the Ameri- can nation, and with the fixed purpose of not entering public life, so as to be separated from his family, unless his country in a time of war should call for his services. And this was a period of life when ambition, the iove of power, the desire of preferment, is apt to be the strongest. His future promised all this. Such had l)ecn the exhibition of talent that eonmiands respect and the qualities that attract regard, that he might without presumption have aspired to any place in the gift of his country- nion. But these considerations did not move him. He laid aside his senatorial robe without regret, and sought that retirement which an ele- vated patriotism and cultivated taste so ardently covet. Such a course as this is at best uncommon, so rarely is it that office seeks the man — so common has it been for ambition to prostitute much that marks public virtue, to grasp at place. For the next five years Mr. Pierci closely applied himself to tlie prac- tice of his profession. It is doing him no more than justice to say that here he was eminently succe.«sful, and won his way to the first rank among the eminent lawyers of his native State. To those who are ac- quainted with the legal character of the State, this is not small praise. The men who fixed the standard of talent at the New Hampshire bar were Jeremiah Mason, Daniel Webster, Levi Woodbury, Smith, Sulli- van, Barllett, Fletcher, and Bell; no one of whom would have held a secondary position at any bar in this country, and any one of whom would have been a man of rank in Westminster Hall: forming, together, li an array of legal ability, which, if equalled, has never been surpassed in this country. And while we do not claim for Genera! Pierce the all but legal intuition of Mason, who, as a mere la\\^'er, was the leader of them all, nor tlie colossal strength of Webster, and wiiile some of the others may possibly have surpassed him in some individual traits of intellect, yet for skill and ability in presenting a case to the jury, and for success in obtaining verdicts, he was surpassed by none of thcni — not even by the tact and artistic skill of Ichabod Bartlett, who has been so felicitously called the " Randolph of the North," nor by Sullivan, the silver tones of whose voice fell upon the jury like a spell. General Pierce is truly a most eloquent advocate. His style is chaste; , his dictJbn rich and classic; his reasoning vigorous and strong; while by his brief but grand and fervid