Birth of President Franklin Pierce

Birth of President Franklin Pierce
Franklin Pierce was born in Hillsborough, New Hampshire, on November 23, 1804.
Pierce was the only U.S. President to hail from New Hampshire. Franklin’s father, Benjamin Pierce, was a decorated Revolutionary War veteran and active in state politics, including two terms as governor. At the age of 12, Franklin Pierce was sent to Hancock Academy to study. Pierce reportedly became homesick and walked home fourteen miles barefoot. His father drove him halfway back to the academy, abandoning Pierce on the side of the road without uttering a word.

In the spring of 1820, Pierce transferred to Francestown Academy to prepare for college. He then entered Bowdoin College in the fall, where he began a lifelong friendship with Nathaniel Hawthorne and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Pierce’s grades were poor at the beginning of his college career, but improved so much he graduated fifth in his class in 1824. Pierce began studying law under Governor Levi Woodbury and was admitted to the bar in 1827.

Aided by his father, Pierce’s political career advanced rapidly. By 1831, at the age of 27, he was speaker of the New Hampshire House of Representatives. From 1833-37, he served as a U.S. congressman, and from 1837-42 as a U.S. senator. Due to his wife’s dislike of public life in Washington, Pierce resigned from the Senate and established a law practice in Concord, New Hampshire. He served as a Brigadier General in the Mexican-American War.
As a leader of the Democratic Party, Pierce was an opponent of abolition. This made him extremely popular in the South. As a result, he was nominated as a candidate for U.S. President. Pierce won the election of 1852 by an overwhelming margin. At 48 years old, Pierce was the youngest man to become President up to that time.

President Pierce’s appeasement of the South proved disastrous. His support of a bill allowing settlers to determine whether slavery would be allowed in the new territories of Kansas and Nebraska led to armed conflict. As soon as the Kansas-Nebraska Act was announced, the new territories were invaded by both pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” from Missouri, and abolitionists from the North. This fighting, called “Bleeding Kansas,” served as a prelude to the Civil War. It also created a political storm which caused the Democratic Party to support slavery, destroying the Whig Party, and leading to the creation of the Republican Party.
Pierce’s expansionist foreign policy also created a negative public reaction. His attempts to acquire the island of Cuba failed, mostly due to Southern opposition. These states feared that if Spain were to release the black slaves in Cuba, it would lead to a slave revolt in the South.

However, in general, Pierce presided over a time of great prosperity in America. The California gold rush was still attracting people to the West. The Federal Government aided in the construction of railroads expanding westward. The United States grew through the Gadsden Purchase, as land from Mexico was added to the Territory of New Mexico.
Due to how he handled the issue of slavery, Pierce had grown very unpopular and was not renominated for election. After a period of traveling abroad, he settled in Massachusetts, where he died in relative obscurity. Until his death, Pierce remained a harsh critic of President Lincoln, believing the President could have avoided the Civil War.
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I haven’t been able to vote for a few days, but continue to enjoy the information.
Thank you for this illuminating series. Not much is ever mentioned about President Pierce. I always wondered why not much happenned during his term. Now thanks to you, I see he couldn’t do much. He was kind of stuck in the middle of two opposing force that had to wait for the Civil War to resolve the issues. Thanks
thanks-long time collector (over 60 years)
Enjoy reading these daily, very well written .
I liked the article: very informative and easy to read! Liked the stamps and coin displayed too!
Liked it!
Wonder where you got the info that the South was opposed to grabbing Cuba. I have always understood that it desired to get it as additional slave territory. Likewise in Central America.
Thanks for the short history lesson on Franklin Pierce. Each day at THIH brings interesting information about the bygone days of our country and the world to new light. Great work, Mystic.
These history essays are a blast! This one on President Pierce was especially good. I can’t wait to see these collected together in a nicely illustrated book (hint hint). What a way to increase my enjoyment of stamps. Thanks again, Mystic!
It should also be mentioned that his wife was virtually a recluse after the tragic death of their last surviving son Bennie who was killed on the train trip to D.C. for Pierce’s inauguration. She felt this could have been God’s punishment for her husband seeking higher office. Very sad.
The article is about Pres. Pierce, the dollar coin shows Franklin Pierce, but the caption below it says it’s the “Johnson Presidential Dollar.”
Thank you. This was corrected.
Not much was known to me about President Franklin Pierce. Thank you for very good write-up accompanied by stamps and coins.