Thursday, February 11, 2010

#13: Fillmore, Millard

Millard Fillmore, our Thirteenth President
January 7, 1800 (Locke, New York) - March 8, 1874 (Buffalo, New York)


  • Fillmore signed the Compromise of 1850, the series of laws passed by Congress that abolished the slave trade in the District of Columbia, admitted California as a free state, and organized the territories of Utah and New Mexico with no reference to slavery. It also established a stricter fugitive slave law. This Compromise is credited with staving of civil war for ten years, but it also was a huge concession to the South.
  • Fillmore was a self-made man. He spent part of his childhood as a clothmaker's apprentice. The master treated him so badly "that the boy once threatened him with an axe." At age 19, Fillmore bought his freedom from the apprenticeship for $30. He also bought the first book he ever owned: a dictionary. He went on to study law with a local judge.
  • Fillmore was elected with Taylor on the Whig ticket. They won in part because the slavery issue split the Democratic vote--many voted with the Free Soil party. Fillmore took office when Taylor died: the second vice president to inherit the presidency in this way.
  • Fillmore married one of his teachers, Abigail Powers, the daughter of a baptist minister. "He was 19 and she was 21, and they fell in love." They had two children and lived in Buffalo. Mrs. Fillmore died one month after her husband left office (he was not re-elected). He remarried five years later in Buffalo, where he continued to be active in politics, opposing Abraham Lincoln's policies.
  • During Fillmore presidency, "Amelia Bloomer wore long pantaloons to draw attention to the woman suffrage movement. Many of her followers copied her costume, and they became known as 'Bloomer Girls.'" Also, school attendance became compulsory in Massachusetts--the first law in the country of its kind.

4 comments:

  1. Bloomer Girls! Also a semi-obscure 1940s Broadway Musical written by Harold Arlen/Yip Harburg (Wizard of Oz) featuring the Agnes de Mille "Civil War Ballet" in the second act, suspiciously similar to the "Dream Ballet" in Oklahoma! It also includes the truly great song "The Eagle and Me" sung here by Lena Horne: (starts at 2:25--worth watching if you have time!) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cMgO5PtlYVk

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  2. I may as well fully geek-out and include the lyrics too :-)

    River it like to flow
    Eagle it like to fly
    Eagle it like to feel
    Its wings against the sky
    Possum it like to run
    Ivy it like to climb
    Bird in the tree and bumble bee
    Want freedom in autumn or summertime
    Ever since that day
    When the world was an onion
    'Twas natch'ral for the spirit
    To soar and play
    The way the Lawd'a-wanted it
    Free as the sun is free
    That's how it's gotta be
    What ever is right
    For bumble bee and river and eagle
    Is right for me
    We gotta be free
    The eagle and me.

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  3. Amazing! Who knew possumes liked to run!?! I love it. Thank you for sharing.

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  4. And by "possumes" I mean possums.

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