'John Bell' (also known as
"The Great Apostate") (
February 15,
1797 –
September 10,
1869) was a
U.S. politician, attorney, and
plantation owner. A wealthy slaveholder from
Tennessee, Bell served in the
United States Congress in both the
House of Representatives and
Senate. He began his career as a
Democrat, he eventually fell out with
Andrew Jackson and became a
Whig. In
1860, he was among a group of Presidential candidates defeated by
Abraham Lincoln in a bitterly divided election that helped spark the
American Civil War.
Early life and career
Bell was born in Mill Creek, a hamlet near
Nashville, Tennessee. He was the son of local farmer Samuel Bell and Margaret (Edmiston) Bell. His father was a blacksmith and farmer. He graduated from the
Cumberland College in 1814 and studied law. He was admitted to the bar in
1816 and established a prosperous practice in
Franklin. Entering politics, he successfully ran for the Tennessee State Senate in
1817. After serving a single term, Bell declined to run for reelection and instead moved to Nashville. He was elected to the
Twentieth United States Congress in
1826, defeating
Felix Grundy, who had the support of presidential candidate Andrew Jackson.
He served Tennessee's 9th Congressional District in the
U.S. House of Representatives from
1827 to
1841. At first a strong supporter of Andrew Jackson, Bell broke with the Jacksonian Democrats in the fight over the controversial
Bank of the United States. He served as
Speaker of the House from
1834 to
1835. He was defeated for the post several other times by his rival,
James K. Polk, a fellow Tennessee Congressman. Bell also served several terms as the chairman of the Committee on Indian Affairs and served on the Committee on Judiciary.

John Bell
Bell then served briefly as
Secretary of War under
William Henry Harrison and
John Tyler in
1841, but then resigned along with the rest of the Cabinet in protest at Tyler's vetoes of Whig bills. He returned to Tennessee and invested in railroads and manufacturing interests, while politically opposing Polk, who won the presidency in 1844 but failed to carry Tennessee through Bell's efforts. In 1847, Bell returned to local politics, being elected to the State House of Representatives. His majority Whig Party selected him for the
United States Senate, where he served until
1859. A reluctant supporter of the
Compromise of 1850, Bell was only one of two Southern senators (the other being
Sam Houston of
Texas) to vote against the
Kansas-Nebraska Act.

Portrait of John Bell as a younger man.
Bell married twice, first to Sally Dickinson and then to Jane Yeatman after Dickinson's death.
Presidential candidacy
After the collapse of the Whig Party in the
1850s, Bell was among the leaders of the small group (mostly
border state and middle state Whigs) who attempted to preserve the Whig Party in another form, and became the
Presidential candidate of the
United States Constitutional Union Party. The way many people viewed the Constitutional Union Party, unfortunately, was that it was a desperate attempt to save the collapsing Whig Party. The moderate party was formed from a group of southern Whigs who joined with nativists from border states like
Tennessee.
Abraham Lincoln of the
Republican Party won the
United States Presidential election of 1860 in the face of a four-way split of the votes. Bell won 39 electoral votes (13%) and 592,906 popular votes (13% of the total; 39% of Southern popular votes (Lincoln was not on the ballot in several southern states). Bell carried
Virginia,
Kentucky, and
Tennessee, largely as a result of the division of
Democratic votes between
John C. Breckenridge (Democratic candidate representing the
South) and
Stephen A. Douglas (representing the
Northern United States), but received less than 3% of the vote in Northern states.
Later life
Initially opposed to
secession, he travelled to
Washington D.C. to meet with President Lincoln. Bell was initially successful in helping hold Tennessee in the Union after states in the Deep South seceded. However, after the firing on
Fort Sumter in
South Carolina and Lincoln's call for military troops to force the secessionist states back into the
Union, Bell reluctantly accepted Tennessee's subsequent secession and retired from politics, his spirit broken and in ill health. He joined a group of investors in saltworks and ironworks, purchasing a shared interest in the Cumberland Furnace near
Charlotte, Tennessee. However, most of his businesses were severely damaged or ruined during the Civil War. In
1869 Bell died at his home on the banks of the
Cumberland River, near the Cumberland Furnace not far from
Dover, Tennessee. He was buried in Nashville's
Mt. Olivet Cemetery.
External links
★
John Bell at Famous Americans
★
John Bell at
Find A Grave
★
''The public record and past history of John Bell & Edward Everett''