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The Election of 1856: Buchanan, Frémont, and the Republicans

The Election of 1856 marked a critical turning point in American history. It was the first contest to feature the newly formed Republican Party, and it exposed the nation’s deepening sectional divide over slavery. Democrat James Buchanan, Republican John C. Frémont, and former president Millard Fillmore battled in a three-way race that foreshadowed the coming Civil War.


Pierce’s Troubled Presidency

Incumbent President Franklin Pierce hoped for a second term, but his administration had been rocked by personal tragedy and political disaster. The death of his last surviving son in 1853 devastated Pierce and his wife, leaving him distracted and ineffective.

Politically, Pierce inflamed sectional conflict by signing two highly controversial measures:

By 1856, Pierce was deeply unpopular in the North. Though he sought renomination, his failures made him untenable for many Democrats.


A Divided Democratic Convention

At the Democratic National Convention in Cincinnati, leading candidates included:

After more than a dozen ballots, both Pierce and Douglas withdrew. The nomination went to James Buchanan, who had been serving as U.S. minister to Great Britain during the Kansas crisis. His absence allowed him to emerge as a compromise figure with no direct ties to the bloodshed. Democrats promoted him as the “safe choice”, presenting Buchanan as a calm, steady hand untainted by recent conflicts.

Buchanan’s running mate was John C. Breckinridge of Kentucky, a youthful Southern Democrat whose presence reassured slaveholding states.


The Birth of the Republican Party

The Republican Party, founded in 1854, emerged from the ashes of the Whig Party and the Free Soil movement. Its central platform opposed the extension of slavery into the territories, condemned polygamy in Mormon settlements, and championed free soil, free labor, and a Transcontinental Railroad.

Their slogan captured their populist appeal:
“Free Speech, Free Press, Free Soil, Freemen, Frémont… and Victory!”

The Republicans nominated John C. Frémont, a dashing explorer, military officer, and former senator from California, nicknamed “The Pathfinder.” His running mate was William L. Dayton of New Jersey. Abraham Lincoln, then still little known outside Illinois, had been considered but was not chosen.

Frémont’s campaign electrified the North, but in the South his name was so toxic that he didn’t even appear on most ballots — underscoring the Republicans’ identity as an almost entirely sectional Northern party.


The Know-Nothing (American) Party

The Know-Nothing Party, officially called the American Party, rose on a wave of anti-immigrant and anti-Catholic sentiment. Despite its secrecy and bigotry, it had electoral success in the mid-1850s, including sending 35 members to Congress and electing Nathaniel P. Banks as Speaker of the House.

The party nominated former president Millard Fillmore, though he was not formally a member and did not endorse their nativist positions. His running mate was Andrew Jackson Donelson, the nephew of President Andrew Jackson.

Fillmore’s candidacy represented the last gasp of the Whigs and the peak of the Know-Nothing movement. Though he carried only Maryland, his 21.5% share of the popular vote showed there was still appetite for a “third option” among voters unwilling to fully commit to either major party.


The Campaigns

The 1856 campaign was one of the nastiest yet.


The Election of 1856 Results

The election results highlighted the nation’s deepening divide:

Buchanan carried almost the entire South and much of the North, while Frémont swept New England, Michigan, Wisconsin, and several Midwestern states. Fillmore carried only Maryland but took sizeable minority votes elsewhere, reflecting lingering Whig/Know-Nothing sentiment.


Significance

The Election of 1856 revealed how fragile the Union had become:


Legacy

The Election of 1856 followed the Election of 1852, when Franklin Pierce’s win masked sectional tensions but quickly dissolved amid the Kansas-Nebraska Act. Buchanan’s victory in 1856 gave Democrats another term, but the Republicans’ meteoric rise ensured the old balance was gone forever.

The next contest, the Election of 1860, would shatter the old order completely — bringing Abraham Lincoln to power, prompting Southern secession, and pushing the United States into Civil War.

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