John Tyler

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John Tyler
John Tyler

In office
April 4, 1841 – March 4, 1845
Vice President(s)   none
Preceded by William Henry Harrison
Succeeded by James Knox Polk

In office
March 4, 1841 – April 4, 1841
President William Henry Harrison
Preceded by Richard M. Johnson
Succeeded by George Dallas

Born March 29, 1790
Charles City County, Virginia
Died January 18, 1862
Richmond, Virginia
Political party Whig and none
Spouse Letitia Christian Tyler (1st wife)
Julia Gardiner Tyler (2nd wife)
Religion The Episcopal Church, Deism
Signature

John Tyler, Jr. (March 29, 1790January 18, 1862) was the tenth (1841-1845) President of the United States. A long-time Democrat, he was elected Vice President on the Whig ticket and on becoming president, in 1841, he broke with that party. His most famous achievement was the annexation of the Republic of Texas in 1845. He was the first president born after the adoption of the U.S. Constitution and the first to assume the office of President upon the death of his predecessor (William Henry Harrison).

Contents

[edit] Biography

John Tyler was born the son of John Tyler, Sr. (1747-1813) and Mary Armistead (1761-1797), in Charles City County, Virginia, as the seventh of eight children. He was educated at the College of William and Mary and went on to study law with his father, who became Governor of Virginia (1808-1811). Admitted to the bar in 1809 and commenced practice in Charles City County. He served as a captain of a military company in 1813 and became a member of the Virginia State house of delegates 1811-1816 and was later a member of the council of state in 1816.

Tyler was elected as a Democratic Republican to the Fourteenth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of John Clopton. He was reelected to the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Congresses and served from December 17, 1816, to March 3, 1821. Tyler declined to be a candidate for renomination in 1820 because of impaired health. He became a member of the Virgina State house of delegates 1823-1825. Tyler was elected to be the Governor of Virginia (1825-1827).

Tyler was elected as a Jacksonian (later Anti-Jacksonian) to the United States Senate in 1827, he was reelected in 1833 and served from March 4, 1827, to February 29, 1836 when he resigned. He served as President pro tempore of the Senate during the Twenty-third Congress, and was chairman of the Committee on the District of Columbia (Twenty-third and Twenty-fourth Congresses), as well as the Committee on Manufactures (Twenty-third Congress), a member of the Virginia State constitutional convention in 1829 and 1830 and a member of the Virginia State house of delegates in 1839.

He was drawn into the newly-organized Whig Party, Tyler was elected vice president in 1840 as running mate to William Henry Harrison. Their campaign slogans of "Log Cabins and Hard Cider" and "Tippecanoe and Tyler too" are among the most famous in American politics. He was inaugurated March 4, 1841, and served until the death of President Harrison on April 4, 1841. Tyler took the oath of office as President of the United States on April 6, 1841, and served until March 3, 1845.

Tyler was the first Vice President to assume the Presidency in this manner. He acceded to the Presidency upon the death of President Harrison on April 4, 1841, and took the Presidential oath of office as specified by the Constitution on April 6. The Cabinet and U.S. Congress agreed with Tyler that he was President and not merely Acting President of the United States, and as the Constitution was not explicit on that aspect of succession (until the 1967 ratification of the 25th Amendment), both the House and Senate passed resolutions recognizing Tyler as President.

After his presidential career Tyler became a delegate to and president of the peace convention held in Washington, D.C. in 1861 as an effort to devise means to prevent the impending war. Tyler was a delegate to the Confederate Provisional Congress in 1861; elected to the House of Representatives of the Confederate Congress, but died in Richmond, Va., January 18, 1862, before the assembling of the Congress. He is buried in Hollywood Cemetery.

[edit] Family and personal life

Tyler married twice, firstly to Letitia Christian on March 29, 1813. They had eight children:

Letitia served as First Lady of the United States but died on September 10, 1842. Tyler spent two years as a widower. His daughter-in-law Elizabeth Priscilla Cooper served as First Lady for this period. He then married Julia Gardiner on June 26, 1844. Tyler's children were reluctant to accept his new wife because she was about five years younger than his eldest daughter, Mary. At the time, Tyler was 54 and Gardiner was 24. He was the first President to marry while in office. They had seven children:

Altogether, Tyler was the father of at least 15 children, more than any other President before or after him. His youngest child, Pearl, died 100 years, 1 week, and 6 days after the death of his eldest daughter, Mary.

[edit] Presidency 1841-1845

[edit] Policies

Tyler postage stamp
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Tyler postage stamp

His presidency was rarely taken seriously in his time, he was usually referred to as the "Acting President" or "His Accidency" by opponents. Further, Tyler quickly found himself at odds with his former political supporters. Harrison had been expected to adhere closely to Whig Party policies and work closely with Whig leaders, particularly Henry Clay. Tyler shocked Congressional Whigs by vetoing virtually the entire Whig agenda, twice vetoing Clay's legislation for a national banking act following the Panic of 1837 and leaving the government deadlocked. Tyler was officially expelled from the Whig Party in 1841, a few months after taking office, and became known as "the man without a party." The entire cabinet he had inherited from Harrison resigned in September, aside from Daniel Webster, Secretary of State, who remained to finalize the Webster-Ashburton Treaty in 1842, demonstrating his independence from Clay.

For two years, Tyler struggled with the Whigs, but when he nominated John C. Calhoun as Secretary of State, to 'reform' the Democrats, the gravitational swing of the Whigs to identify with "the North" and the Democrats as the party of "the South," led the way to the sectional party politics of the next decade. The last year of Tyler's presidency was marred by a freak accident that killed two of his Cabinet members. During a ceremonial cruise down the Potomac River on February 28, 1844, the main gun of the USS Princeton blew up during a demonstration firing, instantly killing Thomas Gilmer, the Secretary of the Navy, and Abel P. Upshur, the Secretary of State. Tyler's future second wife, Julia Gardiner, whom he met two years earlier at a reception was also aboard the USS Princeton. Her father, David Gardiner was among those killed during the explosion. Tyler and Gardiner were married not long afterwards in New York City, on June 26, 1844.

Tyler advocated annexation of Texas to the Union. Whigs opposed this expansion because it would upset the balance between North and South and risked war with Mexico. When the Senate blocked a treaty (which needed a 2/3 vote), Tyler annexed Texas through a joint resolution that passed the House 132-76 and the Senate 27-25 in the last days of his term.

[edit] Rhode Island's Dorr Rebellion

In May 1842, when the Dorr Rebellion in Rhode Island came to a head, Tyler pondered the request of the governor and legislature to send in Federal troops to help it suppress the Dorrite insurgents. The insurgents under Thomas Dorr had armed themselves and proposed to install a new state constitution. Tyler called for calm on both sides, and recommended the governor enlarge the franchise to let most men vote. Tyler promised that in case an actual insurrection should break out in Rhode Island he would employ force to aid the regular, or Charter, government. He made it clear that federal assistance would be given not to prevent but only to put down insurrection and would not be available until violence had been committed. After listening to reports from his confidential agents, Tyler decided that the 'lawless assemblages' were dispersing and expressed his confidence in a "temper of conciliation as well as of energy and decision." He did not send any federal forces. The rebels fled the state when the state militia marched against them. [Chitwood pp 326-30]

[edit] The impeachment attempt

In 1843, after he vetoed a tariff bill, the House of Representatives considered the first impeachment resolution against a president in American history. A committee headed by former president John Quincy Adams concluded that Tyler had misused the veto, but the impeachment resolution did not pass.

[edit] Administration and Cabinet

Official White House Portrait
Enlarge
Official White House Portrait
OFFICE NAME TERM
President John Tyler 1841–1845
Vice President None  
Secretary of State Daniel Webster 1841–1843
  Abel P. Upshur 1843–1844
  John C. Calhoun 1844–1845
Secretary of the Treasury Thomas Ewing 1841
  Walter Forward 1841–1843
  John C. Spencer 1843–1844
  George Bibb 1844–1845
Secretary of War John Bell 1841
  John C. Spencer 1841–1843
  James Madison Porter 1843–1844
  William Wilkins 1844–1845
Attorney General John J. Crittenden 1841
  Hugh S. Legaré 1841–1843
  John Nelson 1843–1845
Postmaster General Francis Granger 1841
  Charles Wickliffe 1841–1845
Secretary of the Navy George E. Badger 1841
  Abel P. Upshur 1841–1843
  David Henshaw 1843–1844
  Thomas Gilmer 1844
  John Y. Mason 1844–1845


[edit] Supreme Court appointments

Tyler appointed the following Justices to the Supreme Court of the United States:

[edit] States admitted to the Union

[edit] Post-Presidency

John Tyler's Sherwood Forest Plantation in Charles City County, Virginia inwhich he and his wife, Julia, lived in after their leave from The White House.
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John Tyler's Sherwood Forest Plantation in Charles City County, Virginia inwhich he and his wife, Julia, lived in after their leave from The White House.

Tyler retired to a plantation, named "Walnut Grove", he had bought in Virginia, renaming it "Sherwood Forest" to signify that he had been "outlawed" by the Whig party and withdrew from electoral politics, though his advice continued to be sought by states-rights Democrats.

[edit] Confederate allegiances

Tyler had long been an advocate of states' rights, believing that the question of a state's "free" or "slave" status ought to be decided at the state level, with no input from the federal government. He was a slaveholder for his entire life. In February 1861, Tyler re-entered public life to sponsor and chair the Washington Peace Convention. The convention sought a compromise to avoid civil war while the Confederate Constitution was being drawn up at the Montgomery Convention. When the Senate rejected his plan, Tyler urged Virginia's immediate secession.

Having served in the provisional Confederate Congress in 1861, he was elected to the Confederate House of Representatives but died of bronchitis and bilious fever before he could take office. Given that he was in Texas on his way to the House of Representatives when he died, Tyler was technically the first U.S. President to die in another country. His final words were "Perhaps it is best." Tyler is buried in Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond, Virginia. The city of Tyler, Texas is named for him. [1]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  • Oliver Perry Chitwood; John Tyler, Champion of the Old South. (1939), the standard scholarly biography, 495 pp
  • Crapol, Edward P. John Tyler, the Accidental President (2006), scholarly biography, 344pp
  • Crapol, Edward P. "John Tyler and the Pursuit of National Destiny." Journal of the Early Republic 1997 17(3): 467-491. ISSN 0275-1275 Fulltext in Jstor. Abstract: Tyler has been inaccurately portrayed as a narrow sectionalist and proslavery advocate. Although a slaveholding Virginian, Tyler enunciated a consistent vision of national destiny and tried to use his political power to advance goals of national aggrandizement. He was Madisonian in that he advocated limited government, slavery, and territorial-commercial expansionism as complementary to one another. This view was not just continental or hemispheric, but global in outlook. It was only when secession appeared inevitable that he sided with secessionists in his state in 1861.
  • Monroe, Dan. The Republican Vision of John Tyler Texas A&M U. Press, 2003. 252 pp.
  • Peterson, Norma Lois. The Presidencies of William Henry Harrison and John Tyler. U. Press of Kansas, 1989. 329 pp.
  • Schouler, James. History of the United States of America: Under the Constitution vol. 4. 1831-1847. Democrats and Whigs. (1917) online edition
  1. ^ Lamb, Brian, the C-SPAN staff (2000). Who's Buried in Grant's Tomb?: A Tour of Presidential Gravesites. Washington, DC: National Cable Satellite Corporation. ISBN 1-881846-07-5.

[edit] External links

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Preceded by
John Clopton
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Virginia's 23rd congressional district

1817-1821
Succeeded by
Andrew Stevenson
Preceded by
James Pleasants
Governor of Virginia
1825-1827
Succeeded by
William Branch Giles
Preceded by
John Randolph
United States Senator (Class 1) from Virginia
1827-1836
Served alongside: Littleton W. Tazewell, William C. Rives, Benjamin W. Leigh
Succeeded by
William C. Rives
Preceded by
George Poindexter
President pro tempore of the United States Senate
March 3, 1835December 6, 1835
Succeeded by
William R. King
Preceded by
(none)
Whig Party vice presidential nominee
1836(a) (lost), 1840 (won)
Succeeded by
Theodore Frelinghuysen
Preceded by
Richard M. Johnson
Vice President of the United States
March 4, 1841April 4, 1841
Succeeded by
George M. Dallas
Preceded by
William Henry Harrison
President of the United States
April 4, 1841(b)March 4, 1845
Succeeded by
James K. Polk
Preceded by
(none)
Delegate to the Confederate Provisional Congress from Virginia
Representative-elect(c) to the First Confederate Congress from Virginia

1861–1862
Succeeded by
(none)
(a) The Whig Party ran regional candidates in 1836. Tyler ran in the Southern states, and Francis Granger ran in the Northern states.
(b) Tyler did not take the oath of office until April 6.
(c) Tyler was elected in 1861, but died before taking office.