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The Correspondence of Zachary Taylor and Millard Fillmore: Volume 1, January 1844-June 1848
Cohen, Michael David; Cotz, Amy Larrabee (Author) · University of Tennessee Press · Hardcover
"Budding treason insists on extending the slave territory, and if it can not, threatens dissolution of this glorious union."
—Millard Fillmore, June 22, 1844
"War even when carried on in the mildest & most humane manner possible, is a scourge to any Nation."
—Zachary Taylor, January 5, 1848
This series features letters written by or to Zachary Taylor and Millard Fillmore, the twelfth (1849–50) and thirteenth (1850–53) presidents of the United States. It begins in 1844, when they became prominent national figures. It will continue through Taylor's death in the White House and end, in 1853, with Fillmore's political retirement. The letters document diverse perspectives on a growing and divided nation.
In that decade, the United States expanded its boundaries while advancing toward civil war. Americans debated Caribbean and European revolutions, import tariff adjustments, a global cholera pandemic, the sale of alcohol, and Indigenous peoples' expulsion from the East. Presidents Taylor and Fillmore worked with Congress on the Compromise of 1850, an attempt to bridge the widening rift over the status of western territories and the enslavement of Black Americans.
Volume 1 begins with the two men's emergence as national leaders and ends with their nominations as president and vice president. In 1844–45, Taylor, a Baton Rouge–based cotton planter and army general, gathered troops near the US border with Texas. He soon led them into that republic, which the United States aimed to annex, then into Mexico, which still claimed Texas. In 1846–47, Taylor commanded forces in the Mexican American War. That concluded in 1848 with the US acquisition of half of Mexico.
Fillmore, a Buffalo lawyer and former congressman, failed in his bids in 1844 for the vice presidency and the New York governorship. He nonetheless contributed to the debate about Texas annexation and slavery. He became the founding chancellor of the University of Buffalo in 1846 and was elected state comptroller in 1847. In the latter role, he enforced treaties with Native peoples and state laws affecting taxes, religion, and public schools.
In June 1848, the Whig Party paired these very different men on its presidential ticket. This volume comprises their incoming and outgoing letters about war, immigration, voting, art, literature, gender, agriculture, technology, medicine, and more. Many discuss the people forced to labor on Taylor's Mississippi plantation and his skepticism of partisanship and presidential authority. The letters' authors range from the powerful and famous to the vulnerable and obscure. Over all loom questions of slavery, expansion, and the survival of the Union.
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