FREE SOIL PARTY

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The 'Free Soil Party' was a short-lived political party in the United States active in the 1848 and 1852 presidential elections, and in some state elections. It was a breakaway faction of the Democratic Party and was largely absorbed by the Republican Party in 1854. Its main purpose was opposing the expansion of slavery into the territories, arguing that free men on free soil comprised a morally and economically superior system to slavery. The free soilers were against the expansion of slavery but not the idea of slavery; their goal was to gain the land to the west, and keep the land free of slaves.

Contents
Positions
First convention
Compromise of 1850
Legacy
Presidential candidates
Famous Free Soilers
See also
References

Positions


Free Soil candidates ran on the platform that declared: "...we inscribe on our banner, 'Free Soil, Free Speech, Free Labor and Free Man,' and under it we will fight on and fight ever, until a triumphant victory shall reward our exertions."
The party also called for a homestead act and a tariff for revenue only. The Free Soil Party attracted mainly abolitionists from the North and other free states. Its main support came from Yankee-settled areas of upstate New York, western Massachusetts, and northern Ohio, although other states also had representatives.
Van Buren / Adams campaign banner.

First convention


In 1848, the first party convention was held in Buffalo, New York, where the party nominated former Democratic President Martin Van Buren with Charles Francis Adams as vice president. The main party leaders were Salmon P. Chase of Ohio and John P. Hale of New Hampshire. They won no electoral votes. The nomination of Van Buren had the adverse effect of discouraging many anti-slavery Whigs from joining the Free Soil Party.

Compromise of 1850


The Compromise of 1850 undercut the party's no-compromise position, and its vote fell off sharply.

Legacy


The Free Soil Party was a notable third party. More successful than most, it sent two Senators and fourteen Representatives to the thirty-first Congress. Its presidential nominee in 1848, Martin Van Buren, received 291,616 votes against Zachary Taylor of the Whigs and Lewis Cass of the Democrats; Van Buren received no electoral votes. The Party's "spoiler" effect in 1848 may have put Zachary Taylor into office in a narrowly-contested election.
The strength of the party, however, was its representation in Congress. The sixteen elected officials' influence far exceeded its numbers. The party's most important legacy was as a route for anti-slavery Democrats to join the new Republican coalition.

Presidential candidates


Year Presidential candidate Vice Presidential candidate Won/Lost
1848 Martin Van Buren Charles Francis Adams Lost
1852 John P. Hale George W. Julian Lost

Famous Free Soilers



Charles Francis Adams, Sr., Party's vice presidential candidate in 1848

Salmon P. Chase

Charles Sumner, U.S. Senator from Massachusetts

David C. Broderick, U.S. Senator from California

Oren B. Cheney, legislator from Maine, founder of Bates College

William Cullen Bryant

Walt Whitman

See also



Second Party System

Origins of the American Civil War

Appeal of the Independent Democrats

References



★ Frederick J. Blue; ''Salmon P. Chase: A Life in Politics'' 1987

★ Frederick J. Blue. ''The Free Soilers: Third Party Politics, 1848-54'' (1973)

★ Martin Duberman; ''Charles Francis Adams, 1807-1886'' 1968.

★ Eric Foner; ''Free Soil, Free Labor, Free Men: The Ideology of the Republican Party before the Civil War'' 1970

★ T. C. Smith, ''Liberty and Free Soil Parties in the Northwest'' (New York, 1897)

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