![]() |
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
| Term 1853-1857 |
Party Democrat |
Born November 23, 1804, in Hillsboro, New Hampshire |
Died October 8, 1869, in Concord, New Hampshire |
| Vice President William Rufus King |
First Lady Jane Means Appleton Pierce (Wife) |
Previous Occupation Lawyer, Public Official |
States in Union 31 |
| Family
Pierce’s parents were Benjamin and Anna Kendrick Pierce. Pierce married Jane Means Appleton in 1834. They had two sons: Frank Robert and Benjamin. Their first son, Franklin, died as an infant. |
|||
|
Legacy Pierce was a dark horse candidate for the Democratic Party, only winning the nomination on the forty-ninth ballot. Yet, he won the presidency by a landslide. He was viewed as a potential bridge to unite the country in the ongoing divide over slavery because he represented a northern state, but also supported southern slave owners. Once in office, however, Pierce was not able to fulfill such an elusive goal. Pierce believed that the Constitution safeguarded slavery and was in favor of expanding it. He even desired the acquisition of Cuba as a new slave state. Pierce strongly supported the Kansas-Nebraska Act, which was passed in 1854, and repealed the Missouri Compromise, thereby permitting state residents to decide about slavery for themselves. Bloody encounters between slavery factions ensued in Kansas, as well as in Boston. Pierce is credited with expanding U.S. territory by negotiating the Gadsden Purchase from Mexico in 1853. This deal added the lands that we know today as New Mexico and Arizona for a cost of $10 million. At the end of Pierce’s term, the Democratic Party refused to re-nominate him. When asked what a president should do after leaving office, he noted, “There’s nothing left . . . but to get drunk.” Later in 1860 some friends encouraged him to run for president again, but he refused. |
|||
|
Quotes Pierce commented on slavery during his Inaugural Address: “I believe that involuntary servitude, as it exists in different States of this Confederacy, is recognized by the Constitution.” (March 4, 1853) |
|||
| At This Time 1853: The U.S. Senate ratifies the Gadsden Purchase to acquire parts of southern New Mexico and Arizona • Samuel Colt revolutionizes the manufacture of small arms • Levi Strauss sells heavyweight cotton pants (the first blue jeans) to California miners • 1854: Democrats and Whigs who opposed slavery establish the Republican Party in reaction to the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act • 1856: A Neanderthal skull is found in a cave near Dusseldorf, Germany |
|||
| Did You Know? Soon after Pierce was elected, he and his wife and son were riding in a train from Boston when it suddenly derailed and crashed into a field below the tracks. Bennie was killed in the accident, and the Pierces never recovered. Using Calvinist logic, Pierce interpreted his son’s tragic death as punishment for his own sins. As a result, he refused to follow the presidential precedent of swearing on the Bible at his inauguration. Instead, he raised his right hand and “affirmed“ (rather than “swore”) his loyalty to the Constitution. Pierce was the first president to employ a full-time bodyguard to protect him, a duty which was later assumed by what we now know as the Secret Service. |
|||
| Learn More At: www.piercemanse.org/ (Information about Pierce, his family, and the Pierce family home in Concord, New Hampshire.) |
|||
| Field Trips for Franklin Pierce
The Pierce Manse |
|||