The Presidency of Franklin Pierce
From Library Journal
Gara does not rehabilitate Pierce’s lackluster reputation. A man of “limited ability . . . overwhelmed” by the job, Pierce overcame neither personal nor politically systemic shortcomings. Devoted to the Union, but deeply insecure, he abetted proslavery forces by suborning passage of the Kansas-Nebraska bill. The law “changed everything,” in domestic politics, focusing sectional divisiveness into armed conflict in Kansas, diverting Congress, and giving rise to the Republican party. Pierce’s administration did witness crucial evolution of U. S. foreign policy: the opening of Japan, expansion of trade and influence abroad and, less positively, the flowering of our fixation on Central America. An impressive interpretive synthesis, Gara’s work gives scholars and general readers the best survey of Pierce’s presidency available. – Thomas E. Schott, Office of History, 17th Air Force, Sembach, GermanyCopyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Review
“. . . shows Pierce as a personable politician. . . who lacked the vision and leadership necessary to master the events of his time. ” — Choice”The best survey of Pierce’s presidency available. ” — Library Journal
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December 1st, 2009 at 4:01 am
The years before 1860 were a period of increasing cold war in the United States. From the perspective of over a century after the conclusion of the internal war, we tend to lose the knowledge that there was more to the separatism than the disagreement concerning slavery. While the North/South dispute over slavery was paramount, other regional differences such as the role of the frontier led to a political fragmentation that prevented any faction from being able to govern and solve the growing problems. Several new parties arose while the formerly powerful Whig party was dying. This fragmentation is the main theme of this book and Gara states it very well. With the modern emphasis on the slavery question, the other divisive forces in the nation are often overlooked, which leads to historical inaccuracy. Gara explains in great detail how the political fragmentation prevented any real attempt to resolve the issues. One point in particular that is often ignored is the three-fifths representation. For census purposes a slave was considered to be three-fifths of a person, even though they were also property. This absurdity caused a great deal of resentment in free states, as it concentrated more political power in the slave states than the size of the free population should have allowed. This caused more representatives to be elected from the southern states, which altered the outcome of some of the votes in favor of the south. Deeply resented by many in the north, it points out the inherent absurdities of slavery and is well documented and explained. The federal government was still largely a weak institution with most of the power held by the states. With all of these problems, it would have taken an extraordinary president to alter the course of history. Franklin Pierce was no such man, and the best that can be said is that he muddled through without any great catastrophes. More than anything else, it was his handsome, presidential appearance that earned him the white house. His rise to the presidency was largely an accident, as he was a compromise candidate after the better candidates were somehow disqualified. His administration also began on a tragic note, when one of the Pierce children was killed before the eyes of his father and mother. Being largely untested on the national political arena, Pierce also wore a colossal political tin ear, often making basic errors that made things worse. Given all of these problems, it is surprising that the Pierce administration did as well as it did. As the author points out, his presidency is ranked somewhere above a failure, but nowhere near a success. In reading about all of the problems of the country at that time, it is hard to see where a great deal of improvements could have been made. The country was expanding rapidly and the industrial revolution with associated social changes was just beginning. Slavery was a historical anachronism, clearly in the process of being eliminated and had it not become the symbol of the rights and tradition of the southern states, it would have naturally ceased to exist. Even the ardent proponents of slavery referred to is as the “peculiar institution. ” In retrospect, the forces that led to the regional split were so powerful that it is hard to envision any way that it could not have led to a civil war. Those forces were stronger than any man or political party and in this book you learn about the actions of a man who landed in a job beyond his talents and yet avoided being a total failure. Given the complexity of the circumstances, his time as president was close to the best that could have been done.
December 1st, 2009 at 4:27 am
This is very dry reading. As well, there is almost no mention of Pierce! Instead, the author focuses on the issues/characters that shaped the times. These are crucial to understanding the political atmosphere surrounding Pierce’s presidency, but a biography should focus on the individual. We learn next to nothing about Pierce.