1856 Presidential Election | |
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Convention | |
Date(s) | September 17-September 18, 1856 |
City | Baltimore, Maryland |
Venue | Maryland Institute |
Chair | Edward Bates |
Candidates | |
Presidential Nominee | Millard Fillmore (NY) |
Vice Presidential Nominee | Andrew Donelson (TN) |
Voting | |
Total Delegates | 150 |
Votes Needed for Nomination | 76 |
Results (President) | Fillmore (NY): 150 (100%) |
Ballots | 1 |
‹ 1852 | |
The 1856 Whig National Convention was a quadrennial presidential nomination convention of the Whig Party. The convention was held in Baltimore, Maryland on September 17 and September 18, 1856. Former President Millard Fillmore was nominated as the party's candidate for president, four year after a failed bid to win the nomination in 1852. Andrew J. Donelson, nephew of the late President Andrew Jackson, was nominated as the party's candidate for Vice President. The convention was the last for the Whig party, which had floundered after losing a total of 37 seats in Congress in the 1850 and 1852 elections.
The Whig party had been declining in power for some time before its last national convention in 1856. In the 1850 midterm elections, Democrats strengthened their majority as the Whigs lost 23 seats in the House and 2 seats in the Senate. In 1852, the Whigs lost another 14 House seats and one Senate seat.
A major reason for the Whig party's decline was a loss of its most influential leaders. Whig leaders from Southern slave states joined the Democratic party. Additionally, the Whigs' New York state convention in Syracuse voted to join with the newly-formed Republican party.
On March 10, 1856, the Whig National Committee met and voted to reject the New York Whigs' merger with the Republican party. Whig leaders from Kentucky met and held their state convention in April. There they voted to call a national convention.
In the months leading up to the national convention, Whigs met in convention in several states to select which delegates would be sent to Baltimore in September. Delegates to these state conventions debated several options for the upcoming general election: the party could choose former President Millard Fillmore as its candidate, nominate another Whig, or endorse the Democratic candidate James Buchanan. As the state conventions met, Fillmore emerged as the clear choice.
Twenty-six states sent 150 delegates to the national convention in September 1856. The convention met for only two days and on the second day quickly voted to nominate Fillmore, who had already been nominated by the Know Nothing party. The platform committee inserted a plank in the party platform nominating Fillmore as the Whig's candidate for president and Andrew Jackson Donelson as the vice presidential candidate. Delegates voted to adopt the platform and nominate Fillmore and Donelson.
Candidates | |
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Name | Millard Fillmore |
Party | Whig |
Certified Votes | 150 (100.00%) |
Margin | 0 (0.00%) |