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Daniel Webster

Daniel Webster (January 18, 1782 – October 24, 1852) was an American lawyer and statesman who represented New Hampshire and Massachusetts in the U.S. Congress and served as the 14th and 19th U.S. Secretary of State under Presidents William Henry Harrison, John Tyler, and Millard Fillmore. Webster was one of the most prominent American lawyers of the 19th century, arguing over 200 cases before the United States Supreme Court in his career. During his life, Webster had been a member of the Federalist Party, the National Republican Party, and the Whig Party. He was among the three members of the Great Triumvirate along with Henry Clay and John C. Calhoun.

Daniel Webster
Daguerreotype of Webster, c. 1847
14th and 19th
United States Secretary of State
In office
July 23, 1850 – October 24, 1852
PresidentMillard Fillmore
Preceded byJohn M. Clayton
Succeeded byCharles Magill Conrad
In office
March 6, 1841 – May 8, 1843
President
Preceded byJohn Forsyth
Succeeded byAbel P. Upshur
Chair of the Senate Finance Committee
In office
December 2, 1833 – December 5, 1836[1]
Preceded byJohn Forsyth
Succeeded bySilas Wright
United States Senator
from Massachusetts
In office
March 4, 1845 – July 22, 1850
Preceded byRufus Choate
Succeeded byRobert Charles Winthrop
In office
June 8, 1827 – February 22, 1841
Preceded byElijah H. Mills
Succeeded byRufus Choate
Chair of the House Judiciary Committee
In office
1823–1827
Preceded byHugh Nelson
Succeeded byPhilip P. Barbour
Member of the
U.S. House of Representatives
In office
March 4, 1823 – May 30, 1827
Preceded byBenjamin Gorham
Succeeded byBenjamin Gorham
ConstituencyMassachusetts's 1st district
In office
March 4, 1813 – March 3, 1817
Preceded byGeorge Sullivan
Succeeded byArthur Livermore
ConstituencyNew Hampshire's at-large district
Personal details
Born(1782-01-18)January 18, 1782
Salisbury, New Hampshire, U.S.
DiedOctober 24, 1852(1852-10-24) (aged 70)
Marshfield, Massachusetts, U.S.
Political partyWhig
Other political
affiliations
Spouses
  • (m. 1808; died 1828)
  • (m. 1829)
Children5, including Fletcher
Education
Signature

Coat of arms

Born in Salisbury, New Hampshire, in 1782, Webster established a successful legal practice in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, after graduating from Dartmouth College and serving a legal apprenticeship. A prominent opponent of the War of 1812, he won election to the United States House of Representatives, where he served as a leader of the Federalist Party. Webster left office after two terms and moved to Boston, Massachusetts. He became a leading attorney before the U.S. Supreme Court, winning cases such as Dartmouth College v. Woodward, McCulloch v. Maryland, and Gibbons v. Ogden.

Webster returned to Congress in 1823 and became a key supporter of President John Quincy Adams. He won election to the United States Senate in 1827 and worked with Henry Clay to build the National Republican Party in support of Adams. After Andrew Jackson defeated Adams in the 1828 U.S. presidential election, Webster became a leading opponent of Jackson's domestic policies. He strongly objected to the theory of nullification espoused by John C. Calhoun. His 1830 Second Reply to Hayne speech is widely regarded as one of the greatest speeches ever delivered in Congress.

Webster supported Jackson's defiant response to the Nullification Crisis but broke with the president due to disagreements over the Second Bank of the United States. Webster joined with other Jackson opponents in forming the Whig Party, and unsuccessfully ran in the 1836 U.S. presidential election. He supported Harrison in the 1840 U.S. presidential election and was appointed secretary of state after Harrison took office. Unlike the other members of Harrison's Cabinet, he continued to serve under President Tyler after Tyler broke with congressional Whigs. As secretary of state, Webster negotiated the Webster–Ashburton Treaty, which settled border disputes with Britain. In 1837, Webster was elected as a member to the American Philosophical Society.[2]

Webster returned to the Senate in 1845 and resumed his status as a leading congressional Whig. During the Mexican–American War, he emerged as a leader of the "Cotton Whigs", a faction of Northern Whigs that emphasized good relations with the South over anti-slavery policies. In 1850, President Fillmore appointed Webster as secretary of state, and Webster contributed to the passage of the Compromise of 1850, which settled several territorial issues and enacted a new fugitive slave law. The Compromise proved unpopular in much of the North and undermined Webster's standing in his home state. Webster sought the Whig nomination in the 1852 U.S. presidential election, but a split between supporters of Fillmore and Webster led to the nomination of General Winfield Scott. Webster is widely regarded as an important and talented attorney, orator, and politician, but historians and observers have offered mixed opinions on his moral qualities and ability as a national leader.

Early life edit

Daniel Webster was born on January 18, 1782, in Salisbury, New Hampshire, at a location within the present-day city of Franklin. He was the son of Abigail (née Eastman) and Ebenezer Webster, a farmer and local official who served in the French and Indian War and the American Revolutionary War. Ebenezer's ancestor, the English-born Thomas Webster, had migrated to North America around 1636. Ebenezer had three children from a previous marriage who survived to maturity, as well as five children from his marriage to Abigail; Webster was the second-youngest of the eight siblings.[3] He was particularly close to his older brother, Ezekiel, who was born in 1780.[4] As a youth, he helped work the family farm but was frequently in poor health. With the encouragement of his parents and tutors, he often read works by authors such as Alexander Pope and Isaac Watts.[5]

 
New Hampshire historical marker (number 91) at his birthplace in present-day Franklin, New Hampshire

In 1796, he attended Phillips Exeter Academy, a preparatory school in Exeter, New Hampshire.[6] After studying the classics and other subjects for several months under a clergyman, Webster was admitted to Dartmouth College in 1797.[7] During his time at Dartmouth, he managed the school newspaper and emerged as a strong public speaker.[8] He was chosen as the Fourth of July orator in the college town of Hanover in 1800, and his speech contained the substance of the political principles which he would later become famous for developing.[9] Like his father, and like many other New England farmers, Webster was firmly devoted to the Federalist Party and favored a strong central government.[10] He graduated from Dartmouth in 1801 and was elected to the Phi Beta Kappa honor society.[11]

After graduating from Dartmouth, he apprenticed under Salisbury lawyer Thomas W. Thompson.[12] Though unenthusiastic about studying the law, he believed that becoming a lawyer would allow him to "live comfortably" and avoid the bouts of poverty that had afflicted his father.[13] In order to help support his brother Ezekiel's study at Dartmouth, Webster temporarily resigned from the law office to work as a schoolteacher at Fryeburg Academy in Maine.[14] In 1804, he obtained a position in Boston under the prominent attorney Christopher Gore. Clerking for Gore—who was involved in international, national, and state politics—he learned about many legal and political subjects and met numerous New England politicians.[15] He grew to love Boston, and, in 1805, was admitted to the bar.[16]

Rise to prominence edit

Immediately after winning admission to the bar, Webster set up a legal practice in Boscawen, New Hampshire.[17] He became increasingly involved in politics and began to speak locally in support of Federalist causes and candidates.[18] After his father's death in 1806, he handed over his practice to his brother, Ezekiel, and opened a new practice in the larger town of Portsmouth.[19] Over the decade-long period he lived in Portsmouth, he handled over 1700 cases, becoming one of the most prominent attorneys in New Hampshire.[20] Along with two other lawyers, he was appointed to revise the New Hampshire criminal code and devise regulations for state prisons.[21]

 
Daniel Webster's home in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. The home has since been restored and is now part of the Strawbery Banke museum complex.

During this time the ongoing Napoleonic Wars began to more strongly affect Americans, as Britain impeded U.S. trade with France and impressed American sailors who were allegedly British deserters. President Thomas Jefferson retaliated with the Embargo Act of 1807, stopping all trade to both Britain and France. As New England relied on commerce with the two nations, the region strongly suffered from the embargo, and Webster wrote an anonymous pamphlet attacking Jefferson's policies.[22] He also campaigned for various Federalist candidates, including presidential candidate Charles Cotesworth Pinckney and gubernatorial candidate Jeremiah Smith. Although Jefferson's Democratic-Republican Party dominated national elections, the Federalist Party was competitive throughout the states of New England.[23] In 1812, the United States declared war against Britain, beginning the War of 1812. On July 4, 1812, Webster was invited to give a speech before the Washington Benevolent Society. His speech, which strongly attacked the war but warned against secession, was reprinted in newspapers throughout New England.[24]

After the speech, he was selected as a delegate to the Rockingham Convention, a local assembly that issued a report critical of Jefferson's Democratic-Republican successor, James Madison.[25] The Rockingham Memorial, which was largely written by Webster, challenged Madison's reasons for going to war, arguing that France had been just as culpable in impeding American trade as Britain had and raising the specter of secession. The Rockingham Memorial gained nationwide notoriety as a document exemplifying New England's opposition to the war.[26] After the convention, the state Federalist Party nominated him as a candidate for the U.S. House of Representatives. Though Madison won re-election in the 1812 U.S. presidential election, the Federalist-backed presidential candidate won New England, and Federalists swept the New Hampshire elections for the House of Representatives.[27]

Congressman and constitutional lawyer edit

First stint in the House, 1813–1817 edit

By May 1813, when he arrived in the House of Representatives for the first time, the United States had seen numerous setbacks in the War of 1812. Nonetheless, Madison's Democratic-Republican Party dominated the Thirteenth Congress, controlling over three-fifths of the seats in the House of Representatives and over two-thirds of the seats in the Senate.[28] Webster continued to criticize the war and attacked effort to impose conscription, wartime taxes, and a new trade embargo.[29] He was appointed to a steering committee that coordinated Federalist actions in the House of Representatives and, by the end of the Thirteenth Congress, he had emerged as a respected speaker on the House floor.[30] In early 1815, the war came to an end after news of the signing of the Treaty of Ghent reached the United States.[31]

After the war, President Madison called for the establishment of the Second Bank of the United States (known as the "national bank"), the imposition of a protective tariff, and federally-financed public works. While Speaker of the House Henry Clay and Congressman John C. Calhoun worked to pass Madison's proposals, other Democratic-Republicans opposed these policies because they conflicted with the party's traditional commitment to a weaker federal government.[32] Webster favored a national bank in principle, but he voted against the bill that established the national bank because he believed that the bank should be required to remove paper banknotes issued by various state-charted banks from circulation. Before the national bank came into operation, he then led the passage of a bill that required all debts to the government to be paid in specie, Treasury notes, or notes issued by the national bank.[33] In the tariff debate, he occupied a middle ground; he favored using tariff rates to protect domestic manufacturing, but did not want tariff rates to be so high that they would harm his home state's trading concerns. Though he took an active role in crafting the tariff bill, he ultimately missed the final vote on the Tariff of 1816.[34] Seeking more lucrative legal work, he began to strongly consider relocating to Boston or New York during his time in Congress.[35] In 1816, he declined to seek another term in the House of Representatives, instead establishing a new residence in Boston. In the 1816 elections, the Federalist Party suffered numerous defeats throughout the country and Democratic-Republican candidate James Monroe was elected president.[36]

Leading lawyer edit

"This, sir, is my case. It is the case not merely of that humble institution, it is the case of every college in our land... Sir, you may destroy this little institution; it is weak; it is in your hands! I know it is one of the lesser lights in the literary horizon of our country. You may put it out. But if you do so you must carry through your work! You must extinguish, one after another, all those greater lights of science which for more than a century have thrown their radiance over our land. It is, sir, as I have said, a small college. And yet there are those who love it!"

Daniel Webster (Dartmouth College v. Woodward)

Webster continued to practice law while serving in the House of Representatives, and he argued his first case before the Supreme Court of the United States in early 1814.[37] He had been highly regarded in New Hampshire since his days in Boscawen and was respected for his service in the House of Representatives, but he came to national prominence as counsel in a number of important Supreme Court cases.[38] Between 1814 and 1852, he argued at least one case in the vast majority of the sessions of the Supreme Court; he served as counsel in a total of 223 cases, and won approximately half of those cases.[39] He also represented numerous clients outside of Supreme Court cases, including prominent individuals such as George Crowninshield, Francis Cabot Lowell, and John Jacob Astor.[40]

Though Congress was dominated by Democratic-Republicans, Chief Justice John Marshall ensured that the Federalist ideology retained a presence in the courts. Webster quickly became skilled at articulating arguments designed to appeal to Marshall and another influential Supreme Court justice, Joseph Story.[41] He played an important role in eight of the most celebrated constitutional cases decided by the Court between 1814 and 1824. In many of these—particularly in Dartmouth College v. Woodward (1819) and Gibbons v. Ogden (1824)—the Supreme Court handed down decisions based largely on his arguments. Marshall's most famous declaration, "the power to tax is the power to destroy," in McCulloch v. Maryland (1819), was taken from Webster's presentation against the state of Maryland. As a result of his series of successes in Supreme Court cases, many people began calling him the "Great Expounder and Defender of the Constitution."[42] He would continue to argue cases before the Supreme Court after Marshall's death in 1835, but he generally found the Taney Court to be less receptive to his arguments.[43]

In Dartmouth College v. Woodward, Webster was retained by the Federalist trustees of his alma mater, Dartmouth College, in their case against the newly elected New Hampshire Democratic-Republican state legislature. The legislature had passed new laws converting Dartmouth into a state institution, by changing the size of the college's trustee body and adding a further board of overseers, which they put into the hands of the state senate.[44] He argued that the Constitution's Contract Clause prohibited the legislature from altering the college's board of trustees. The Marshall Court, continuing with its history of limiting states' rights and reaffirming the supremacy of the constitutional protection of contract, ruled in favor of Dartmouth. The ruling set the important precedent that corporations did not, as many then held, have to justify their privileges by acting in the public interest, but were independent of the states.[45]

 
Daniel Webster represented the Second Bank of the United States both in the Congress and before the US Supreme Court as well serving as Director of its Boston branch on which he made out this $3,001.01 draft on July 24, 1824.

He remained politically active during his time out of Congress, serving as a presidential elector, meeting with officials like Secretary of War John C. Calhoun, and delivering a well-received speech that attacked high tariffs.[46] With the Federalists fading away as a national party, the period of Monroe's presidency came to be known as the "Era of Good Feelings" due to the lack of partisan conflict.[36] As the Federalists failed to field a candidate in the 1820 U.S. presidential election, Webster, acting in his capacity as a presidential elector, cast his vote for Monroe.[46] He was then elected as a delegate to the 1820 Massachusetts Constitutional Convention. There he spoke in opposition to suffrage for all regardless of property ownership, arguing that power naturally follows property, and the vote should be limited accordingly; but the constitution was amended against his advice.[47] He also supported the (existing) districting of the state senate so that each seat represented an equal amount of property.[48] His performance at the convention furthered his reputation. In a letter to a mutual friend, Joseph Story wrote, "our friend Webster has gained a noble reputation. He was before known as a lawyer; but he has now secured the title of an eminent and enlightened statesman."[49] In December 1820, he delivered an enthusiastically received address commemorating the bicentennial of the landing of the Mayflower at Plymouth Rock.[50]

Second stint in the House, 1823–1827 edit

 
1834 portrait by Francis Alexander

At the behest of Federalist leaders and the business elite in Boston, Webster agreed to run for the United States House of Representatives in 1822. He won the election and returned to Congress in December 1823.[51] In recognition of his mastery of legal issues, Speaker of the House Henry Clay assigned him the chairmanship of the House Judiciary Committee. In that role, he tried to pass a bill that would relieve Supreme Court justices of having to travel to far-flung western districts, but his bill did not receive a vote in the House.[52] Seeking to re-establish his reputation for oratorical prowess on the floor of the House of Representatives, he gave a speech supporting the Greek cause in the Greek War of Independence.[53] In another speech, he attacked the bill imposing the Tariff of 1824, arguing that high tariff rates unfairly benefited manufacturing to the detriment of agriculture and commerce.[54] In a third speech, he defended the construction of internal improvements by the federal government, arguing that roads helped unite the nation both economically and in creating a "feeling truly national."[55] While a Representative, he continued accepting speaking engagements in New England, most notably his oration on the fiftieth anniversary of the Battle of Bunker Hill.[56] He also continued his legal work, though his government service required him to rely more on his law partners.[57]

In the 1824 U.S. presidential election, the Democratic-Republicans split among Clay, Calhoun, William H. Crawford, Andrew Jackson, and John Quincy Adams.[58] Despite their shared connection to Massachusetts, Webster had an uneasy relationship with Adams because the latter had left the Federalist Party earlier in his career;[59] for his part, Adams detested him.[60] As no candidate won a majority of the electoral vote, the 1824 election was decided in a contingent election held by the House of Representatives.[a] Webster had remained neutral prior to the election, but he supported Adams in the contingent election, in large part because he viewed Jackson as completely unqualified to be president and Crawford had suffered a major stroke.[61] Along with Clay, he helped rally members of the House around Adams, and Adams was elected on the first ballot of the contingent election.[62]

In 1825, President Adams set off a partisan realignment by putting forward an ambitious domestic program, based on Clay's American System, that included a vast network of federally-funded infrastructure projects. States' rights Democratic-Republicans, including Senator Martin Van Buren and Vice President John C. Calhoun, strongly opposed the program and rallied around Jackson. While some Federalists gravitated to Jackson's camp, Webster became the leader of the pro-administration forces in the House of Representatives.[63] Supporters of Adams became known as National Republicans, while Jackson's followers coalesced into the Democratic Party. Like many Federalists, he did not immediately cast aside his partisan identity as a Federalist but embraced the American System and began to favor protective tariff rates.[64] Justus D. Doenecke indicates that his newfound support of protective tariffs was the result of "his new closeness to the rising mill-owning families of the region, the Lawrences and the Lowells."[25] He also backed the administration's defense of treaty-sanctioned Creek Indian land rights against Georgia's expansionist claims.[65]

First period in the Senate edit

 
Portion of painting, Webster's Reply to Hayne by George P.A. Healy

Adams administration, 1827–1829 edit

In 1827, the Massachusetts legislature elected him to the United States Senate. He was initially reluctant to leave the House of Representatives, where he had established seniority and a strong base of power, but ultimately accepted election to the Senate.[66] After a period of consideration, he voted for the Tariff of 1828, which raised tariff rates.[67] Prior to the 1828 U.S. presidential election, he worked with Clay to build the National Republican Party across the country. While Clay rallied support for the party in the West, he emerged as a leading National Republican in the Northeastern states.[68] Despite his efforts and those of Clay, Democratic candidate Andrew Jackson decisively defeated President Adams in the 1828 election.[69]

Jackson administration, 1829–1837 edit

Second Reply to Hayne edit

When my eyes shall be turned to behold for the last time the sun in heaven, may I not see him shining on the broken and dishonored fragments of a once glorious Union; on States dissevered, discordant, belligerent; on a land rent with civil feuds, or drenched, it may be, in fraternal blood! Let their last feeble and lingering glance rather behold the gorgeous ensign of the republic... not a stripe erased or polluted, nor a single star obscured, bearing for its motto, no such miserable interrogatory as "What is all this worth?" nor those other words of delusion and folly, "Liberty first and Union afterwards"; but everywhere, spread all over in characters of living light, blazing on all its ample folds, as they float over the sea and over the land, and in every wind under the whole heavens, that other sentiment, dear to every true American heart,— Liberty and Union, now and for ever, one and inseparable!

Daniel Webster (Second Reply to Hayne)

After Jackson took office, Webster opposed most of the measures favored by the new administration, including the Indian Removal Act and the establishment of the spoils system.[70] The Jackson administration suffered from factionalism between supporters of Secretary of State Van Buren and Vice President Calhoun, the latter of whom took a prominent role in propounding the doctrine of nullification. Calhoun held that the states had the power to "nullify" laws, and he and his allies sought to nullify the high tariff rates imposed by the Tariff of 1828 (which they referred to as the "Tariff of Abominations").[71] During a debate over land policy in January 1830, South Carolina Senator Robert Y. Hayne, in an effort to sway the West against the North and the tariff, accused the North of attempting to limit Western expansion for their own benefit. Hayne served as a surrogate for Vice President Calhoun, who could not himself address the Senate on the issue due to his status as the Senate's presiding officer.[72][page needed] Webster objected to the sectional attack on the North, but even more strongly objected to Hayne's pro-states' rights position. Speaking before the Senate, he articulated his belief in a "perpetual" union and attacked the institution of slavery, baiting Hayne into expounding on the doctrine of nullification on the Senate floor.[73]

Replying to his first speech, Hayne accused him of "making war upon the unoffending South," and he asserted that nullification was constitutional because the federal government was ultimately subservient to the states.[74] On January 27, Webster delivered his response, titled the Second Reply to Hayne. He held that the people, and not the states, held ultimate power, and the people had established the Constitution as the supreme law of the land. He further argued that the doctrine of nullification "approach[ed] absurdity," and, by denying power to the federal government, would effectively restore the balance of power established under the Articles of Confederation. He argued that nullification constituted treason against the United States, and would ultimately lead to civil war as state officials would call out the militia to resist federal laws and actions. He ended his speech with a call for "Liberty and Union, now and for ever, one and inseparable!"[75] The Second Reply to Hayne was reprinted thousands of times, and was favorably received throughout the country. In assessing the speech's impact and popularity, some contemporaries compared it to the Federalist Papers.[76] Three months after he delivered the Second Reply to Hayne, Calhoun openly broke with President Jackson when, in response to Jackson's toast of "Our Union, it be preserved," Calhoun replied, "The Union: Next to our liberty, the most dear."[77]

Bank War and 1832 election edit

By 1830, he considered Clay to be the likely National Republican nominee in the 1832 U.S. presidential election, though he was skeptical that Clay would be able to defeat the Democratic nominee.[78] The establishment of the Anti-Masonic Party, a third party opposed to both Jackson and Clay, added a new factor into the election. Some Anti-Masonic leaders attempted to recruit him to run for the presidency,[b] but he ultimately declined to run for fear of alienating Clay and other National Republicans.[80] Instead, he undertook a subtle campaign to win the National Republican nomination, planning a tour of the Northeast and the Northwest; His angling for the presidency marked the start of an ambivalent relationship between Clay and Webster.[81] Nonetheless, he urged Clay to accept election to the Senate, and the two convinced Nicholas Biddle, the president of the national bank, to apply for an early renewal of the national bank's charter. As Jackson had a long record of opposing the national bank, both hoped to make the national bank an issue in the 1832 presidential election. Clay was formally nominated by the National Republicans in December 1831, while Jackson was nominated for a second term in 1832.[82]

Biddle requested a renewal of the national bank's charter in January 1832, setting off what became known as the "Bank War."[83] With Clay focusing on a tariff bill, Webster became the unofficial leader of pro-national bank forces in the Senate. He helped ensure that Congress approved a renewal of the charter without making any major modifications, such as a provision that would allow states to prevent the national bank from establishing branches within their borders.[84] Congress approved the charter renewal, but, as was expected, Jackson vetoed the bill in July 1832; Jackson argued the bank was unconstitutional and served to "make the rich richer and the potent more powerful." On the Senate floor, Webster attacked the veto, arguing that only the judicial branch could judge a bill's constitutionality.[85] Afterward he supported Clay's presidential campaign and continued his efforts on behalf of the national bank, but Jackson was re-elected by a decisive margin.[86]

Nullification Crisis edit

Though Congress replaced the "Tariff of Abominations" with the Tariff of 1832, Calhoun and his Nullifier allies remained dissatisfied with tariff rates.[87] Shortly after the 1832 presidential election, a South Carolina convention passed a resolution declaring the Tariff of 1832 to be "null, void, and no law" in South Carolina, marking the start of the Nullification Crisis. Hayne resigned from the Senate to become the governor of South Carolina, while Calhoun took Hayne's former seat in the Senate. In December 1832, Jackson issued the Proclamation to the People of South Carolina, warning that he would not allow South Carolina to defy federal law. Webster strongly approved of the Proclamation, telling an audience at Faneuil Hall that Jackson had articulated "the true principles of the Constitution," and that he would give the president "my entire and cordial support" in the crisis.[88] He strongly supported Jackson's proposed Force Bill, which would authorize the president to use force against states that attempted to obstruct federal law. At the same time, he opposed Clay's efforts to end the crisis by lowering tariff rates, as he believed that making concessions to Calhoun's forces would set a bad precedent.[89] After a spirited debate between himself and Calhoun, Congress passed the Force Bill in February 1833. Soon after, it passed the Tariff of 1833, the product of negotiations between Clay and Calhoun; the bill called for the gradual lowering of tariffs over a ten-year period. Although they symbolically "nullified" the Force Bill, South Carolina leaders accepted the new tariff law, bringing an end to the Nullification Crisis.[90]

Rise of the Whig Party and 1836 candidacy edit

 
1836 electoral vote results

As Calhoun drifted away from the Democratic Party and occasionally cooperated with the National Republicans to oppose Jackson, some contemporaries began to refer to Calhoun, Webster, and Clay as "the Great Triumvirate."[91] At the same time, Webster's alliance with Jackson in the Nullification Crisis caused some observers to wonder if he would join the Democratic Party or found a new party centered on their nationalistic vision.[92] Jackson's decision to remove government deposits from the national bank in late 1833 ended any possibility of a Webster-Jackson alliance and helped to solidify partisan lines.[93] As chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, Webster led the Senate's effort to prevent Jackson's secretary of the treasury, Roger Taney, from removing government deposits.[94] As the national bank's charter was due to expire in 1836, before the end of Jackson's term, he attempted to save the national bank through a compromise measure, but Democrats rejected his proposal. Ultimately, the Senate was unable to prevent the deposit removals or the expiration of the national bank's charter, but it did pass resolutions censuring Jackson and Taney. Webster's decision to vote for the censure resolution caused a permanent break with Jackson.[95]

In the aftermath of the battle over the national bank, Jackson's political opponents coalesced into the Whig Party. By taking a name rooted in American and British history, the Whigs implicitly criticized Jackson as a tyrannical executive.[96] Although National Republicans like Clay and Webster formed the core of the Whig Party, Anti-Masonic leaders like William H. Seward and states' rights Democrats like John Tyler also joined the new party.[97] The Whig Party proved more durable than the National Republican Party and, along with the Democrats, the Whigs became one of the two major parties of the Second Party System, which would extend into the 1850s.[98] By 1834, Webster supporters such as Caleb Cushing, Rufus Choate, Abbott Lawrence, and Edward Everett had begun preparing for his candidacy in the 1836 U.S. presidential election.[99] With Clay showing no indication of making another run, Webster hoped to become the main Whig candidate in the 1836 election, but General William Henry Harrison and Senator Hugh Lawson White retained strong support in the West and the South, respectively. Rather than uniting behind one presidential candidate, Whig leaders settled on a strategy of running multiple candidates in order to force a contingent election in the House of Representatives.[100]

He was nominated for president by the Massachusetts legislature, but Harrison won the backing of most Whigs outside of the South. Although his reputation as a national figure was far greater than that of Harrison, many Whigs hoped that Harrison's military record would allow him to replicate Jackson's 1832 victory.[101] Webster's chances also suffered from his lingering association with the Federalist Party, his close relationship with elite politicians and businessmen, and his lack of appeal among the broad populace; Robert Remini writes that the American public "admired and revered him but did not love or trust him."[102] With little support outside of his home state, he attempted to withdraw his presidential candidacy, but, to his eventual regret, Massachusetts Whig leaders convinced him to stay in the race.[103] Meanwhile, the 1835 Democratic National Convention nominated Van Buren, Jackson's preferred successor, for president. In the 1836 election, Van Buren won a majority of the popular and electoral vote, Harrison finished a distant second, and White carried two Southern states. Webster won only the electoral votes of Massachusetts.[104] Adding to his displeasure, he lost a major Supreme Court decision, Charles River Bridge v. Warren Bridge, shortly after the election.[105][c]

Van Buren administration, 1837–1841 edit

External videos
  Presentation by Robert Remini on Daniel Webster: The Man and His Time, October 5, 1997, C-SPAN

Shortly after Van Buren took office, a major economic downturn known as the Panic of 1837 began. Webster and his Whig allies blamed Jackson's policies, including the Specie Circular, for the panic, but a worldwide economic downturn was a major contributing factor. The panic hit the country hard and proved disastrous for Webster's personal finances.[108] With the help of Nicholas Biddle and other friendly bankers, Webster had gone into debt to engage in land speculation on a broad scale.[109] His debt was exacerbated by his propensity for lavishly furnishing his estate and giving away money with "reckless generosity and heedless profusion," in addition to indulging the smaller-scale "passions and appetites" of gambling and alcohol.[110] The panic resulted in many creditors calling in their loans and, according to Remini, Webster would never emerge from debt after 1837.[111] Nonetheless, he remained focused on his political career.[108] While Whigs promoted the American System as the means for economic recovery, Van Buren's response to the panic focused on the practice of "strict economy and frugality."[112] Webster attacked Van Buren's proposals to address the economic crisis, including the establishment of an Independent Treasury system,[113] and he helped arrange for the rescinding of the Specie Circular.[114]

He entertained hopes of winning the Whig nomination in the 1840 U.S. presidential election but ultimately declined to challenge Clay or Harrison, both of whom commanded broader support within the party.[115] He remained neutral between Clay and Harrison, instead departing for a trip to Europe, where he attended his daughter's wedding and befriended Alexander Baring, 1st Baron Ashburton.[116] While he was abroad, the 1839 Whig National Convention nominated Harrison for president. Although many Whigs favored a Harrison-Webster ticket, the convention instead nominated John Tyler of Virginia for vice president.[117] Webster served as a prominent campaign surrogate for Harrison in the 1840 election, although he disliked the party's new, popular style of campaigning that made use of songs and slogans like "Tippecanoe and Tyler too."[118] The Whigs enjoyed great success in the 1840 elections, as Harrison took a majority of the popular and electoral vote and the party won control of Congress.[119]

Secretary of State in the Tyler administration edit

 
Through the Webster–Ashburton Treaty, Webster helped bring an end to a boundary dispute in Maine

Harrison extensively consulted Webster and Clay regarding presidential appointments, and the two Whig leaders competed to place their supporters and allies in key positions. Harrison initially hoped that Webster would serve as secretary of the treasury in order to spearhead his economic program, but Webster instead became secretary of state, giving him oversight of foreign affairs.[120] Just one month after taking office, Harrison died from pneumonia, and was succeeded by John Tyler. Though Tyler and Webster strongly differed regarding ideology (Tyler was a devotee of states' rights) and personality, they initially enjoyed a strong working relationship, partly because each saw Clay as a rival for power in the Whig Party.[121] As Tyler, a former Democrat, had long been skeptical of the need for a national bank, Webster urged Whig congressmen to back a compromise bill put forward by Secretary of the Treasury Thomas Ewing which would have re-established the national bank but restricted its branching power. Congress rejected the compromise and instead passed Clay's bill, which was subsequently vetoed by Tyler. After Tyler vetoed another Whig bill, every Cabinet member except for Webster resigned, and a caucus of Whigs voted to expel Tyler from the party in September 1841. When Webster informed Tyler that he would not resign, Tyler responded, "give me your hand on that, and now I will say to you that Henry Clay is a doomed man."[122]

Facing a hostile Congress, Tyler and Webster turned their attention to foreign policy.[123] The administration put a new emphasis on American influence in the Pacific Ocean, reaching the first U.S. treaty with China, seeking to partition Oregon Country with Britain, and announcing that the United States would oppose any attempt to colonize the Hawaiian Islands.[124] The most pressing foreign policy issue involved relations with Britain, as the United States had nearly gone to war with Britain over the Caroline affair and a border conflict between Maine and Canada.[125] Seeking improved relations with the United States, British Prime Minister Robert Peel dispatched Lord Ashburton on a special mission to the United States.[126] After extensive negotiations, the United States and Britain reached the Webster–Ashburton Treaty, which clearly delineated Maine's northern border and other sections of the U.S.-Canada border that had been in dispute.[127] Senator Thomas Hart Benton led Senate opposition to the treaty, arguing that it "needlessly and shamelessly" relinquished American territory, but few others joined Benton in voting against the treaty, and it won ratification.[128]

After mid-1841, congressional Whigs continually pressured Webster to resign, and by early 1843, Tyler had also begun to pressure Webster to leave office.[129] As Tyler moved even farther away from Whig positions and began preparing a campaign for the Democratic nomination in the 1844 U.S. presidential election, Webster left office in May 1843.[130] With Webster gone, Tyler turned his attention to the Texas annexation.[131] Clay was nominated for president at the 1844 Whig National Convention,[132] while the Democrats spurned both Tyler and former President Van Buren in favor of James K. Polk, a protege of Andrew Jackson.[133] Webster's service in the Tyler administration had badly damaged his credibility among Whigs, but he began to rebuild old alliances within the party.[134] Tyler's attempts to annex Texas became the key issue in the 1844 election, and Webster came out strongly against annexation. He campaigned on behalf of Clay, telling one crowd, "I know of no great national constitutional question; I know of no great interest of the country ... in which there is any difference between the distinguished leader of the Whig Party and myself."[135] Despite Webster's campaigning, Polk defeated Clay in a close election.[136] The election of the expansionist Polk ensured the annexation of Texas, and annexation was completed after Polk took office.[137]

Second period in the Senate edit

Polk administration, 1845–1849 edit

 
Portrait of Daniel Webster commissioned by the Senate in 1955

Webster considered retiring from public office after the 1844 election, but he accepted election to the United States Senate in early 1845.[138] Webster sought to block the adoption of Polk's domestic policies, but Congress, controlled by Democrats, reduced tariff rates through the Walker tariff and re-established the Independent Treasury system. In May 1846, the Mexican–American War began after Congress, responding to a clash instigated by U.S. troops against the Mexican Army at the disputed Texas–Mexico border, declared war on Mexico.[139] During the war, Northern Whigs became increasingly split between "Conscience Whigs" like Charles Sumner, who strongly favored anti-slavery policies, and "Cotton Whigs" like Webster, who emphasized good relations with Southern leaders.[140] Webster had been a long-standing opponent of slavery; in an 1837 speech he called slavery a "great moral, social, and political evil," and added that he would vote against "any thing that shall extend the slavery of the African race on this continent, or add other slaveholding states to the Union."[141] But, unlike his more strongly anti-slavery constituents, he did not believe that Congress should interfere with slavery in the states, and he placed less emphasis on preventing the spread of slavery into the territories.[142] Nonetheless, because Webster opposed the acquisition of Mexican territory (with the exception of San Francisco), he voted against the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, in which the United States acquired the Mexican Cession.[143]

General Zachary Taylor's success in the Mexican–American War drove him to the front ranks of Whig candidates in the 1848 U.S. presidential election.[144] As Taylor held unclear political positions and had never been publicly affiliated with the Whig Party, Clay and Webster each launched their own bids for the presidency, but opposition from the Conscience Whigs badly damaged Webster's standing.[145] On the first ballot of the 1848 Whig National Convention Webster finished a distant fourth behind Taylor, Clay, and General Winfield Scott. Taylor ultimately won the presidential nomination on the convention's third ballot, while Millard Fillmore of New York was selected as the party's vice presidential nominee.[146] After Webster declined the request of Conscience Whigs to lead a new, anti-slavery third party, Conscience Whigs and "Barnburner" Democrats launched the Free Soil Party and nominated a ticket consisting of former President Van Buren and Charles Francis Adams. Despite having previously stated that he would not support Taylor in the 1848 presidential campaign, Webster threw his backing behind Taylor. Ultimately, Taylor won the election, defeating both Van Buren and Democratic nominee Lewis Cass.[147]

Taylor administration, 1849–1850 edit

I shall stand by the Union...with absolute disregard of personal consequences. What are personal consequences...in comparison with the good or evil that may befall a great country in a crisis like this?...Let the consequences be what they will.... No man can suffer too much, and no man can fall too soon, if he suffer or if he fall in defense of the liberties and constitution of his country.

Daniel Webster (July 17, 1850 address to the Senate)

Having only tepidly endorsed Taylor's campaign, Webster was excluded from the new administration's Cabinet and was not consulted on major appointments.[148] After the 1848 election, the fate of the territories acquired in the Mexican-American War became a major subject of debate in Congress, as Northern and Southern leaders quarreled over the extension of slavery.[149] In January 1850, Clay introduced a plan which combined the major subjects under discussion. His legislative package included the admission of California as a free state, the cession by Texas of some of its northern and western territorial claims in return for debt relief, the establishment of New Mexico and Utah territories, a ban on the importation of slaves into the District of Columbia for sale, and a more stringent fugitive slave law.[150] The plan faced opposition from strongly pro-slavery Southern leaders like Calhoun[151] and anti-slavery Northerners like William Seward and Salmon Chase.[152] President Taylor also opposed Clay's proposal, since he favored granting California statehood immediately and denied the legitimacy of Texas's claims over New Mexico.[153]

Clay had won Webster's backing for his proposal before presenting it to Congress, and Webster provided strong support for Clay's bill in the Senate.[154] In what became known as the "Seventh of March Speech", Webster attacked Northerners and Southerners alike for stirring up tensions over slavery. He admonished Northerners for obstructing the return of fugitive slaves but attacked Southern leaders for openly contemplating secession.[155] After the speech, Webster was bitterly attacked by New England abolitionists. Theodore Parker complained, "No living man has done so much to debauch the conscience of the nation," while Horace Mann described Webster as "a fallen star! Lucifer descending from Heaven!"[156] In contrast to that view, James G. Blaine wrote a few decades later:

Mr. Webster had in his own lifetime seen the thirteen colonies grow into thirty powerful States. He had seen three millions of people, enfeebled and impoverished by a long struggle, increased eightfold in number, surrounded by all the comforts, charms, and securities of life. All this spoke to him of the Union and of its priceless blessings. He now heard its advantages discussed, its perpetuity doubted, its existence threatened. * * * * Mr. Webster felt that a generation had been born who were undervaluing their inheritance, and who might, by temerity, destroy it. Under motives inspired by these surroundings, he spoke for the preservation of the Union.[157]

The debate over Clay's compromise proposal continued into July 1850, when Taylor suddenly and unexpectedly died of an illness.[158]

Secretary of State in the Fillmore administration edit

Compromise of 1850 edit

 
Daguerreotype photograph of Webster by John Adams Whipple, c. 1847

Millard Fillmore ascended to the presidency upon Taylor's death. Shortly after taking office, Fillmore dismissed Taylor's Cabinet appointees, named Webster as his secretary of state,[d] and came out in favor of Clay's compromise.[159] Fillmore chose the remaining members of his Cabinet in consultation with Webster, and Webster became the unofficial leader in the Cabinet.[160] After Fillmore took office, Clay took a temporary leave from the Senate, but Democratic Senator Stephen A. Douglas of Illinois took the lead in advocating for a compromise based largely on Clay's proposals.[161] On behalf of the president, Webster drafted a special message to Congress calling for an end to the crisis over the territories, and he used the power of patronage to woo potential supporters. Soon after the Fillmore administration delivered the special message, Congress passed Douglas's legislative package, which became known as the Compromise of 1850.[162]

Due to a prosperous economy and various other trends, few Whigs pushed for a revival of the national bank and other long-standing party policies during the Fillmore administration, and the Compromise of 1850 became the central political issue.[163] While Fillmore hoped to reconcile with anti-Compromise Northern Whigs, Webster sought to purge them from the party, and he frequently intervened to block the election or appointment of anti-Compromise Whigs.[164] In the North, the most controversial portion of the Compromise of 1850 was the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850, and Webster became closely involved in enforcing the law.[165] Disputes over fugitive slaves were widely publicized North and South, inflaming passions and raising tensions in the aftermath of the Compromise of 1850. Many of the administration's prosecutions or attempts to return slaves ended badly for the government, as in the case of Shadrach Minkins.[166] In Massachusetts, anti-slavery Whigs allied with Democrats and, in a major rebuke to Webster, elected Free Soil leader Charles Sumner to the Senate.[167]

Opening of the New York & Erie Rail Road edit

When the New York & Erie Rail Road was completed in May 1851, President Fillmore and several members of his cabinet, including Webster, made a special, two-day excursion run to open the railway. It is reported that Webster viewed the entire run from a rocking chair attached to a flatcar, with a steamer rug and jug of high-quality Medford rum.[168][169] At stops, he would get down and speechify.

Foreign affairs edit

Fillmore appointed Webster not only for his national stature and pro-Compromise position, but also for his experience in foreign affairs, and Fillmore relied on Webster to guide his administration's foreign policy.[170] In the aftermath of the failed Hungarian Revolution of 1848, a diplomatic incident with the Austrian Empire arose over the Taylor administration's sympathetic actions towards the Hungarian rebels. Rather than backing down, the Fillmore administration secured the release of exiled Hungarian leader Lajos Kossuth from the Ottoman Empire and gave a banquet in Kossuth's honor.[171] In 1851, Webster wrote a book about Kossuth's life.[172] The administration was particularly active in Asia and the Pacific, especially with regard to Japan, which prohibited nearly all foreign contact. In November 1852, the administration launched the Perry Expedition to force Japan to establish trade relations with the United States.[173] Perry was successful in his mission, as Japan agreed to open trade relations with the 1854 Convention of Kanagawa.[174] The Fillmore administration also reached trade agreements with Latin American countries,[175] worked to counter British influence in Central America[176] and took measures to prevent unauthorized military expeditions against Cuba and other Latin American countries.[177] An expedition to Cuba led by Narciso López precipitated a diplomatic crisis with Spain, but Fillmore, Webster, and the Spanish government worked out a series of face-saving measures that prevented an outbreak of hostilities from occurring.[178]

1852 election edit

 
Webster (red) won the support of several delegates at the 1852 Whig National Convention

Encouraged by Fillmore's professed lack of desire to pursue the Whig nomination in the 1852 U.S. presidential election, Webster launched another campaign for the presidency in 1851.[179] Fillmore was sympathetic to the ambitions of his secretary of state, but he was unwilling to completely rule out accepting the party's 1852 nomination, as he feared doing so would allow his rival, William Seward, to gain control of the party.[180] Another candidate emerged in the form of General Winfield Scott, who, like previously successful Whig presidential nominees William Henry Harrison and Zachary Taylor, had earned fame for his martial accomplishments. Scott had supported the Compromise of 1850, but his association with Seward made him unacceptable to Southern Whigs.[180] As Southerners retained a lingering distrust of Webster, they threw their backing behind Fillmore.[181] Thus, Scott emerged as the preferred candidate of most Northern Whigs, Fillmore became the main candidate of Southern Whigs, and Webster was only able to win backing from a handful of delegates, most of whom were from New England.[182]

On the first presidential ballot of the 1852 Whig National Convention, Fillmore received 133 of the necessary 147 votes, while Scott won 131 and Webster won 29.[183] Although both Webster and Fillmore were willing to withdraw in favor of the other, their respective delegates at the convention were unable to unite around one candidate, and Scott took the nomination on the 53rd ballot.[184] Webster was personally devastated by the defeat, and he refused to endorse Scott's candidacy.[185] Webster allowed various third party groups to nominate him for president, although he did not openly condone these efforts.[186] Scott proved to be a poor candidate, and he suffered the worst defeat in Whig history, losing to Democratic nominee Franklin Pierce.[187] Thousands of anti-Scott Whigs and members of the nativist Native American Party cast their vote for Webster.[188]

Personal life, family, and religious views edit

If we work upon marble, it will perish; if we work upon brass, time will efface it; if we rear temples, they will crumble to dust; but if we work on men's immortal minds, if we impress on them with high principles, the just fear of God and love for their fellow-men, we engrave on those tablets something which no time can efface, and which will brighten and brighten to all eternity.

Daniel Webster (May 22, 1852)

 
Grace Fletcher

In 1808, Webster married Grace Fletcher, a schoolteacher and the daughter of a New Hampshire clergyman.[189] Between 1810 and 1822, Daniel and Grace had five children: Grace, Daniel "Fletcher", Julia, Edward, and Charles. Grace and Charles died before reaching adulthood.[190] Webster's wife, Grace, died in January 1828 due to a cancerous tumor,[191] and Webster suffered another loss when his brother, Ezekiel, died in April 1829.[192] In December 1829, Webster married Caroline LeRoy, the 32-year-old daughter of a New York merchant. They remained married until Webster's death, and she lived until 1882. She and Webster had two children together, another daughter named Grace and a son named Noah Webster.[193] After the death of his first wife, Webster was frequently the subject of rumors in Washington regarding his alleged promiscuity; many suspected that the painter Sarah Goodridge, with whom he had a close relationship, was his mistress.[194]

Webster and his family lived in Portsmouth until 1816 when they relocated to Boston.[195] In 1831, Webster purchased a 150-acre estate (now known as the Thomas–Webster Estate) in Marshfield, Massachusetts. In the ensuing years, Webster spent much of his earnings making various improvements to his estate, and he made it his primary residence in 1837. After 1829, Webster also owned his father's home, The Elms, in Franklin, New Hampshire.[196] Webster's older son, Fletcher, married a niece of Joseph Story, established a profitable law practice, served as chief clerk of the State Department, and was the only one of his siblings to outlive his father.[197] Fletcher died at the 1862 Second Battle of Bull Run while serving as a colonel in the Union army.[198] Webster's younger son, Edward, died of typhoid fever in January 1848 while serving in the Mexican-American War.[199] Webster's daughter, Julia, married Samuel Appleton Appleton, but died of tuberculosis in April 1848.[200]

Conflicting opinions have been voiced as to his religion. The Unitarian Universalist Church, citing Unitarianism in America from 1902, claim him as their own.[201] Another source, the 1856 biography The American Statesman: The Life and Character of Daniel Webster, proclaims him an avowed orthodox Trinitarian, baptized and raised in an Orthodox Congregational Church, and who died a member of the Episcopal Church.[202] Remini writes that, though Webster occasionally attended other churches, he remained closely affiliated with the Congregational church throughout his life. In an 1807 letter to a Congregational pastor, Webster wrote, "I believe in the utter inability of any human being to work out his own Salvation, without the constant aids of the spirit of all grace... Although I have great respect for some other forms of worship, I believe the Congregational mode, on the whole, to be preferable to any other."[203]

Death edit

By early 1852, Webster had begun to suffer from cirrhosis of the liver, and his poor health increasingly made it difficult for him to serve as secretary of state. In September 1852, Webster returned to his Marshfield estate, where his health continued to decline due to cirrhosis and a subdural hematoma.[204] He died in Marshfield, Massachusetts on October 24, 1852, at the age of 70, and is buried in Winslow Cemetery near his estate. His last words were, "I still live."[205]

Legacy edit

 
Daniel Webster monument, Central Park, New York City, from the base: "Liberty and Union, Now and Forever, One and Inseparable"
 
Webster Hall, at Dartmouth College.

Historical evaluations edit

Secession! Peaceable secession! Sir, your eyes and mine are never destined to see that miracle. The dismemberment of this vast country without convulsion! ... There can be no such thing as a peaceable secession. Peaceable secession is an utter impossibility... We could not separate the states by any such line if we were to draw it...

Daniel Webster (March 7, 1850 A Plea for Harmony and Peace)

Remini writes that "whether men hated or admired [Webster], all agreed ... on the majesty of his oratory, the immensity of his intellectual powers, and the primacy of his constitutional knowledge."[206] Ralph Waldo Emerson, who had criticized Webster following the Seventh of March address, remarked in the immediate aftermath of his death that Webster was "the completest man", and that "nature had not in our days, or not since Napoleon, cut out such a masterpiece."[207] In Profiles in Courage, John F. Kennedy called Webster's defense of the Compromise of 1850, despite the risk to his presidential ambitions and the denunciations he faced from the North, one of the "greatest acts of courageous principle" in the history of the Senate.[208] Conversely, Seventh of March has been criticized by Henry Cabot Lodge who contrasted the speech's support of the 1850 compromise with his 1833 rejection of similar measures. "While he was brave and true and wise in 1833," said Lodge, "in 1850 he was not only inconsistent, but that he erred deeply in policy and statesmanship" in his advocacy of a policy that "made war inevitable by encouraging slave-holders to believe that they could always obtain anything they wanted by a sufficient show of violence."[209]

Several historians suggest Webster failed to exercise leadership for any political issue or vision. Lodge describes Webster's "susceptibility to outside influences that formed such an odd trait in the character of a man so imperious by nature. When acting alone, he spoke his own opinions. When in a situation where public opinion was concentrated against him, he submitted to modifications of his views with a curious and indolent indifference."[210] Similarly, Arthur Schlesinger cites Webster's letter requesting retainers for fighting for the national bank, one of his most inveterate causes; he then asks how Webster could "expect the American people to follow him through hell or high water when he would not lead unless someone made up a purse for him?"[211] Remini writes that "Webster was a thoroughgoing elitist—and he reveled in it."[212]

Webster retains his high prestige in some recent historiography. Baxter argues that his nationalistic view of the union as one and inseparable from liberty helped the union to triumph over the states-rights Confederacy, making it his greatest contribution.[213] Bartlett, however, emphasizing Webster's private life, says his great oratorical achievements were in part undercut by his improvidence with money, his excessively opulent lifestyle, and his numerous conflict of interest situations.[214] Remini points out that Webster's historical orations taught Americans their history before textbooks were widely available.[215] In 1957, a Senate Committee headed by then Senator John F. Kennedy named Webster, Clay, Calhoun, Robert M. La Follette, and Robert A. Taft as the five greatest senators in history—portraits of the "famous five" were added to the Senate Reception Room.[216]

While evaluations on his political career vary, Webster is widely praised for his talent as an orator and attorney. Former Solicitor General Seth P. Waxman writes that "in the realm of advocacy, Webster doesn't merely sit in the Pantheon: He is Zeus himself."[217] Kennedy praised Webster's "ability to make alive and supreme the latent sense of oneness, of union, that all Americans felt but few could express."[218][219] Webster's "Reply to Hayne" in 1830 was generally regarded as "the most eloquent speech ever delivered in Congress," and was a stock exercise for oratory students for 75 years.[220] Schlesinger, however, notes that he is also an example of the limitations of formal oratory: Congress heard Webster or Clay with admiration, but they rarely prevailed at the vote. Plainer speech and party solidarity were more effective, and Webster never approached Jackson's popular appeal.[221]

Memorials edit

Webster's legacy has been commemorated with statues and other memorials. A statue stands in the National Statuary Hall Collection, while another statue stands in Central Park. Another Webster statue is located outside the Massachusetts State House. The USS Daniel Webster (SSBN-626) and the liberty ship SS Daniel Webster were both named for Webster. The first Webster postage stamp was issued in 1870. In all, Daniel Webster is honored on 14 different US postage issues, more than most U.S. Presidents. There is a Daniel Webster Highway and Mount Webster in New Hampshire[222][223] There are 27 towns named for Webster in California, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Texas, Virginia, and West Virginia, including two in Wisconsin (Webster, Burnett County and Webster, Vernon County), a ghost town in Colorado, and Webster and Webster Hollow in Tennessee. Seven counties or parishes are named for Webster. Daniel Webster Elementary School in Marshfield, Massachusetts bears his name.

Daniel Webster has been honored on numerous U.S. Postage stamps
 
Issue of 1879
 
Issue of 1890
 
Issue of 1903
 
Issue of 1932
 
Issue of 1969

In media edit

Webster is the major character in a fictional short story, The Devil and Daniel Webster, by Stephen Vincent Benét. It serves as the basis for a one-act opera of the same name written by American composer Douglas Moore.

Webster is briefly discussed in Chapter XIX of MacKinlay Kantor's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel "Andersonville" (1955).

On film, Webster has been portrayed by

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Under the Constitution, the House can select from the top three electoral vote winners in a contingent election for president. Thus, Jackson, Adams, and Crawford were eligible to be selected, while Clay was not. Calhoun dropped out early in the campaign and won election as vice president.
  2. ^ Unlike Jackson and Clay, he was not a member of a Masonic fraternity.[79]
  3. ^ Aside from Charles River Bridge v. Warren Bridge, other major cases he argued before the Taney Court include Thurlow v. Massachusetts[106] and Luther v. Borden.[107]
  4. ^ Webster's service in the Fillmore administration made him the first individual to serve as secretary of state under three different presidents. James G. Blaine would later match Webster's feat of serving as secretary of state under three different presidents.

References edit

  1. ^ "Membership of the Finance Committee (By Congress and Session)" (PDF). United States Senate Committee on Finance. Retrieved May 2, 2016.
  2. ^ "APS Member History". American Philosophical Society. Retrieved August 24, 2022.
  3. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 29–33.
  4. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 47–48.
  5. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 35–37.
  6. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 38–40.
  7. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 41–42.
  8. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 49–53.
  9. ^   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Webster, Daniel". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 28 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 459–462.
  10. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 53–54.
  11. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 55–56.
  12. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 58–59.
  13. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 58–59, 66–67.
  14. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 60–61.
  15. ^ Lodge 1883, p. 12.
  16. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 73–77.
  17. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 78–79.
  18. ^ Cheek, H. Lee Jr. "Webster, Daniel." In Schultz, David, ed. Encyclopedia of American Law,New York: Facts On File, Inc., 2002. Facts On File, Inc. American History Online
  19. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 83–84.
  20. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 89–90.
  21. ^ Remini 1997, p. 97.
  22. ^ Norton (2005). A People & A Nation. p. 228.
  23. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 95–96.
  24. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 96–99.
  25. ^ a b "Daniel Webster." Discovering Biography. Online Edition. Gale, 2003. Student Resource Center. Thomson Gale. June 16, 2006.
  26. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 100–101.
  27. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 101–102.
  28. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 103–105.
  29. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 107–109, 112–113.
  30. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 109, 120–122.
  31. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 131–132.
  32. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 135–136, 141.
  33. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 136–137.
  34. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 137–140.
  35. ^ Remini 1997, p. 131.
  36. ^ a b Remini 1997, pp. 141–145.
  37. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 115–117.
  38. ^ "Daniel Webster", in American Eras, Volume 5: The Reform Era and Eastern U.S. Development, 1815–1850, Gale Research, 1998. Student Resource Center. Thomson Gale. June 16, 2006.
  39. ^ Remini 1997, p. 119.
  40. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 145–146.
  41. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 116–118.
  42. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 162, 208.
  43. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 443–444.
  44. ^ Baker, Thomas E. "Dartmouth College v. Woodward." In Schultz, David, ed. Encyclopedia of American Law. New York: Facts On File, Inc., 2002. Facts On File, Inc. American History Online.
  45. ^ O'Brien, Patrick K., gen. ed. "Dartmouth College case." Encyclopedia of World History. Copyright George Philip Limited. New York: Facts On File, Inc., 2000. Facts On File, Inc. World History Online. Schlesinger Age of Jackson. p. 324–5.
  46. ^ a b Remini 1997, pp. 170–171.
  47. ^ Schlesinger 1945, pp. 12–15.
  48. ^ Lodge 1883, p. 113.
  49. ^ Lodge 1883, p. 38.
  50. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 178–185.
  51. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 198–200.
  52. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 213–214.
  53. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 210–211, 215–217.
  54. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 221–224.
  55. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 243–244.
  56. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 247–251.
  57. ^ Remini 1997, p. 254.
  58. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 211–212.
  59. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 197.
  60. ^ Remini 1997, p. 226.
  61. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 230–231, 237.
  62. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 238–241.
  63. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 255–261.
  64. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 269–272.
  65. ^ Lodge 1883, p. 49.
  66. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 277–281.
  67. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 295–299.
  68. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 273–277.
  69. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 301–302.
  70. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 313–315, 334.
  71. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 313–314.
  72. ^ Schouler, James (1891). History of the United States. New York: Dodd, Mead & Company.
  73. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 318–320.
  74. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 321–324.
  75. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 325–328.
  76. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 329–330.
  77. ^ Remini 1997, p. 335.
  78. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 336–337, 341.
  79. ^ Remini 1997, p. 339.
  80. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 339–340.
  81. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 341–342.
  82. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 344–345.
  83. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 345, 356.
  84. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 360–363.
  85. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 363–368.
  86. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 370–371.
  87. ^ Howe 2007, pp. 400–404.
  88. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 372–374.
  89. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 374–377.
  90. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 381–387.
  91. ^ Remini 1997, p. 359.
  92. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 374, 387–388.
  93. ^ Cole 1993, pp. 202–203.
  94. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 401, 408–409.
  95. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 410–412.
  96. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 413–415, 420.
  97. ^ Cole 1993, pp. 211–213.
  98. ^ Howe 2007, p. 390.
  99. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 425–426.
  100. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 427–429.
  101. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 430–431, 439–440.
  102. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 450–451.
  103. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 444–448.
  104. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 448–449.
  105. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 459–461.
  106. ^ Remini 1997, p. 605.
  107. ^ Remini 1997, p. 640.
  108. ^ a b Remini 1997, pp. 466–467.
  109. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 452–453.
  110. ^ Lodge 1883, p. 118.
  111. ^ Remini 1997, p. 466.
  112. ^ Howe 2007, pp. 505–506.
  113. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 470–472.
  114. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 478–479.
  115. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 483–484.
  116. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 487–497.
  117. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 501–502.
  118. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 505–507.
  119. ^ Howe 2007, p. 575.
  120. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 511–515.
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  123. ^ Peterson 1989, pp. 113, 145.
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  130. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 583–584.
  131. ^ Peterson 1989, pp. 186–187.
  132. ^ Peterson 1989, pp. 221–222.
  133. ^ Howe 2007, pp. 683–684.
  134. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 584–586.
  135. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 591–596.
  136. ^ Peterson 1989, pp. 243–244.
  137. ^ Peterson 1989, pp. 255–258.
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  147. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 653–656.
  148. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 656–660.
  149. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 658–659.
  150. ^ Smith 1988, pp. 111–112.
  151. ^ Smith 1988, pp. 112–113, 117.
  152. ^ Smith 1988, pp. 119–120.
  153. ^ Smith 1988, pp. 136–142.
  154. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 665–666.
  155. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 669–673.
  156. ^ Kennedy (2004). Profiles in Courage. pp. 69–70.
  157. ^ Blaine, James Gillespie, Twenty Years of Congress, Vol. 1, Ch. V.
  158. ^ Remini 1997, p. 683.
  159. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 684–687.
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  161. ^ Smith 1988, pp. 177–181.
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  163. ^ Holt 1999, pp. 686–688, 738.
  164. ^ Holt 1999, pp. 635–636.
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  168. ^ Stover, John F. (1995). History of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. Purdue University Press. p. 74. ISBN 9781557530660.
  169. ^ Stover, John F. (1999). The Routledge Historical Atlas of the American Railroads. Psychology Press. p. 70. ISBN 9780415921404.
  170. ^ Remini 1997, p. 689.
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  172. ^ Webster, Daniel (1851). Sketch of the Life of Louis Kossuth, Governor of Hungary: Together with the Declaration of Hungarian Independence; Kossuth's Address to the People of the United States; All His Great Speeches in England; and the Letter of Daniel Webster to Chevalier Hulsemann. Stringer & Townsend.
  173. ^ Smith 1988, pp. 96–98.
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  190. ^ Remini 1997, p. 13.
  191. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 285, 288–291.
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  198. ^ Remini 1997, p. 758.
  199. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 626–627, 642.
  200. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 485, 643.
  201. ^ Cooke, George (1902). Unitarianism in America. Kessinger Publishing. p. 271. ISBN 1-4191-9210-8.
  202. ^ Banvard, Joseph (1856). The American Statesman: The Life and Character of Daniel Webster. Gould and Lincoln [etc ., etc.] pp. 302, 303, 306.
  203. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 86–88.
  204. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 753–756, 761.
  205. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 759–760.
  206. ^ Remini 1997, p. 9.
  207. ^ Mott, Wesley T., and Burkholder, Robert E., eds., Emersonian Circles: Essays in Honor of Joel Myerson, University of Rochester Press (1997), p. 60.
  208. ^ Andrew Glass (March 6, 2007). "This Day on Capitol Hill: March 7". POLITICO. Retrieved April 6, 2023.
  209. ^ Lodge 1883, pp. 103, 105.
  210. ^ Lodge 1883, p. 18.
  211. ^ Schlesinger 1945, p. 84.
  212. ^ Remini 1997, pp. 352–353.
  213. ^ Maurice G. Baxter, One and Inseparable: Daniel Webster and the Union (1984)
  214. ^ Irving H. Bartlett, Daniel Webster (1978)
  215. ^ Remini 1997, p. 187.
  216. ^ "The "Famous Five"". United States Senate. Retrieved December 19, 2018.
  217. ^ Waxman, Seth P. (2001). "In the Shadow of Daniel Webster: Arguing Appeals in the Twenty-First Century". J. App. Prac. & Process. 3: 523.
  218. ^ Kennedy (2004). Profiles in Courage. p. 58.
  219. ^ Lodge 1883, p. 66.
  220. ^ Allan Nevins, Ordeal of the Union (1947) 1:288.
  221. ^ Schlesinger 1945, pp. 50–52.
  222. ^ "Smithsonian National Postal Museum". Arago.si.edu. Retrieved January 3, 2011.
  223. ^ Scotts US Stamp Catalogue

Works cited edit

  • Cole, Donald B. (1993). The Presidency of Andrew Jackson. University Press of Kansas. ISBN 0-7006-0600-9.
  • Gienapp, William E. (1988). The Origins of the Republican Party, 1852-1856. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195055016.
  • Holt, Michael (1999). The Rise and Fall of the American Whig Party: Jacksonian Politics and the Onset of the Civil War. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199772032.
  • Howe, Daniel Walker (2007). What Hath God Wrought: The Transformation of America, 1815-1848. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199743797.
  • Lodge, Henry Cabot (1883). Daniel Webster. Houghton, Mifflin. OCLC 16440580.
  • Peterson, Norma Lois (1989). The Presidencies of William Henry Harrison and John Tyler. University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-0400-5.
  • Remini, Robert V. (1997). Daniel Webster: The Man and His Time. W.W. Norton & Company. ISBN 0-393-04552-8.
  • Schlesinger, Arthur M. (1945). The Age of Jackson. Little, Brown and Company. ISBN 9780316773430.
  • Smith, Elbert B. (1988). The Presidencies of Zachary Taylor & Millard Fillmore. University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-0362-6.

Further reading edit

Biographies edit

  • Bartlett, Irving H. Daniel Webster (1978) online edition July 29, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  • Baxter, Maurice G. "Webster, Daniel"; American National Biography Online Feb. 2000. online edition at academic libraries
  • Baxter, Maurice G. One and Inseparable: Daniel Webster and the Union. (1984).
  • Brands, H. W. (2018). Heirs of the Founders: The Epic Rivalry of Henry Clay, John Calhoun and Daniel Webster, the Second Generation of American Giants. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0385542548.
  • Current, Richard Nelson. Daniel Webster and the Rise of National Conservatism (1955), short biography
  • Curtis, George Ticknor. Life of Daniel Webster (1870), useful for quotations online edition vol 1 May 18, 2011, at the Wayback Machine; online edition vol 2 July 21, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  • Fuess, Claude Moore Daniel Webster. (2 vols. 1930). scholarly biography
  • Ogg, Frederic Austin. Daniel Webster (1914) online edition, old scholarly biography
  • Paul, Joel Richard. Indivisible: Daniel Webster and the Birth of American Nationalism (2022) Review
  • Peterson, Merrill D. The Great Triumvirate: Webster, Clay, and Calhoun (1983)
  • Remini, Robert V. Daniel Webster: The Man and His Time (1997)

Specialized scholarly studies edit

  • Arntson, Paul, and Craig R. Smith. "The Seventh of March Address: A Mediating Influence." Southern Speech Communication Journal 40 (Spring 1975): 288–301.
  • Bartlett, Irving H. "Daniel Webster as a Symbolic Hero." New England Quarterly 45 (December 1972): 484–507. in JSTOR
  • Baxter, Maurice G. Daniel Webster and the Supreme Court (1966)
  • Birkner, Michael. "Daniel Webster and the Crisis of Union, 1850." Historical New Hampshire 37 (Summer/Fall 1982): 151–73.
  • Brauer, Kinley J. "The Webster-Lawrence Feud: A Study in Politics and Ambitions." Historian 29 (November 1966): 34–59.
  • Brown, Thomas. "Daniel Webster: Conservative Whig." In Politics and Statesmanship: Essays on the American Whig Party, (1985) pp. 49–92. online
  • Carey, Robert Lincoln. Daniel Webster as an Economist. (1929). online edition
  • Dalzell, Robert F. Jr. Daniel Webster and the Trial of American Nationalism, 1843–1852. (1973).
  • Dubofsky, Melvyn. "Daniel Webster and the Whig Theory of Economic Growth: 1828–1848." New England Quarterly 42 (December 1969): 551–72. in JSTOR
  • Eisenstadt, Arthur A. "Daniel Webster and the Seventh of March." Southern Speech Journal 20 (Winter 1954): 136–47.
  • Fields, Wayne. "The Reply to Hayne: Daniel Webster and the Rhetoric of Stewardship." Political Theory 11 (February 1983): 5–28. in JSTOR
  • Foster, Herbert D. "Webster's Seventh of March Speech and the Secession Movement, 1850." American Historical Review 27 (January 1922): 245–70. in JSTOR
  • Formisano, Ronald P. The Transformation of Political Culture: Massachusetts Parties, 1790s–1840s (1983)
  • Jones, Howard. To the Webster–Ashburton Treaty: A Study in Anglo-American Relations, 1783–1843. (1977). 251 pp.
  • Nathans, Sydney. Daniel Webster and Jacksonian Democracy. (1973).
  • Nathans, Sydney. "Daniel Webster, Massachusetts Man," New England Quarterly 39 (June 1966): 161–81. in JSTOR
  • Nevins, Allan. Ordeal of the Union: Fruits of Manifest Destiny, 1847–1852 (1947), highly detailed narrative of national politics.
  • Parish, Peter J. "Daniel Webster, New England, and the West." Journal of American History 54 (December 1967): 524–49. in JSTOR
  • Prince, Carl E., and Seth Taylor. "Daniel Webster, the Boston Associates, and the U.S. Government's Role in the Industrializing Process, 1815–1830." Journal of the Early Republic 2 (Fall 1982): 283–99. in JSTOR
  • Rakestraw, Donald A. Daniel Webster: Defender of Peace. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield, 2018.
  • Shade, William G. "The Second Party System" in Paul Kleppner ed., Evolution of American Electoral Systems (1983)
  • Sheidley, Harlow W. "The Webster–Hayne Debate: Recasting New England's Sectionalism." New England Quarterly 1994 67(1): 5–29. in Jstor
  • Sheidley, Harlow W. "'Congress only can declare war' and 'the President is Commander in Chief': Daniel Webster and the War Power." Diplomatic History 12 (Fall 1988): 383–409.
  • Shewmaker, Kenneth E. "Forging the 'Great Chain': Daniel Webster and the Origins of American Foreign Policy toward East Asia and the Pacific, 1841–1852." Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 129 (September 1985): 225–59.
  • Shewmaker, Kenneth E. ed. Daniel Webster: "The Completest Man. (1990), specialized studies by scholars
  • Simpson, Brooks D. "Daniel Webster and the Cult of the Constitution," Journal of American Culture 15 (Spring 1992): 15–23. online in Blackwell Synergy
  • Smith, Craig R. "Daniel Webster's Epideictic Speaking: A Study in Emerging Whig Virtues"
  • Smith, Craig R. Daniel Webster and the Oratory of Civil Religion. (2005) 300pp
  • Smith, Craig R. "Daniel Webster's July 17th Address: A Mediating Influence in the 1850 Compromise," Quarterly Journal of Speech 71 (August 1985): 349–61.
  • Smith, Craig R. Defender of the Union: The Oratory of Daniel Webster. (1989).
  • Szasz, Ferenc M. "Daniel Webster – Architect of America's 'Civil Religion'," Historical New Hampshire 34 (Fall/Winter 1979): 223–43.
  • Wilson, Major L. "Of Time and the Union: Webster and His Critics in the Crisis of 1850." Civil War History 14 (December 1968): 293–306. ch 1 of Wilson, Space, Time, and Freedom: The Quest for Nationality and the Irrepressible Conflict, 1815–1861 (1974) online edition

Primary sources edit

  • Select Speeches of Daniel Webster 1817–1845 edited by A. J. George, (1903) . Contains: Defence of the Kennistons; The Dartmouth College Case; First Settlement of New England; The Bunker Hill Monument; The Reply to Hayne; The Murder of Captain Joseph White; The Constitution Not a Compact Between Sovereign States; Speech at Saratoga; and Eulogy on Mr. Justice Story.
  • The works of Daniel Webster edited in 6 vol. by Edward Everett, Boston: Little, Brown and company, 1853. online edition
  • McIntyre, J. W., ed. The Writings and Speeches of Daniel Webster. 18 vols. (1903). vol 8 online
  • Tefft, B. F., ed. The Speeches of Daniel Webster and His Master-Pieces. Alta ed. Philadelphia, Penn.: Porter and Coates, 1854.
  • Van Tyne, Claude H., ed. The Letters of Daniel Webster, from Documents Owned Principally by the New Hampshire Historical Society (1902). online edition
  • Webster, Fletcher, ed. The Private Correspondence of Daniel Webster. 2 vols. 1857. online edition vol 1
  • Wiltse, Charles M., Harold D. Moser, and Kenneth E. Shewmaker (Diplomatic papers), eds., The Papers of Daniel Webster, (1974–1989). Published for Dartmouth College by the University Press of New England. ser. 1. Correspondence: v. 1. 1798–1824. v. 2. 1825–1829. v. 3. 1830–1834. v. 4. 1835–1839. v. 5. 1840–1843. v. 6. 1844–1849. v. 7. 1850–1852 – ser. 2. Legal papers: v. 1. The New Hampshire practice. v. 2. The Boston practice. v. 3. The federal practice (2 v.) – ser. 3. Diplomatic papers: v. 1. 1841–1843. v. 2. 1850–1852 – ser. 4. Speeches and formal writings: v. 1. 1800–1833. v. 2. 1834–1852.

External links edit

  • Daniel Webster Estate
  • Daniel Webster: A Resource Guide from the Library of Congress
  • Works by Daniel Webster at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Daniel Webster at Internet Archive
  • The works of Daniel Webster... 6 vol, 1853 edition
  • The private correspondence of Daniel Webster ed. by Fletcher Webster. 2v 1857 edition
  • Portrait of Daniel Webster, painted by William Willard circa 1839–1985
U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from New Hampshire's at-large congressional district

1813–1817
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Massachusetts's 1st congressional district

1823–1827
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chair of the House Judiciary Committee
1823–1827
Succeeded by
U.S. Senate
Preceded by U.S. Senator (Class 1) from Massachusetts
1827–1841
Served alongside: Nathaniel Silsbee, John Davis
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chair of the Senate Finance Committee
1833–1836
Succeeded by
Preceded by U.S. Senator (Class 1) from Massachusetts
1845–1850
Served alongside: John Davis
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by United States Secretary of State
1841–1843
Succeeded by
Preceded by United States Secretary of State
1850–1852
Succeeded by

daniel, webster, other, people, named, disambiguation, senator, webster, redirects, here, other, uses, senator, webster, disambiguation, january, 1782, october, 1852, american, lawyer, statesman, represented, hampshire, massachusetts, congress, served, 14th, 1. For other people named Daniel Webster see Daniel Webster disambiguation Senator Webster redirects here For other uses see Senator Webster disambiguation Daniel Webster January 18 1782 October 24 1852 was an American lawyer and statesman who represented New Hampshire and Massachusetts in the U S Congress and served as the 14th and 19th U S Secretary of State under Presidents William Henry Harrison John Tyler and Millard Fillmore Webster was one of the most prominent American lawyers of the 19th century arguing over 200 cases before the United States Supreme Court in his career During his life Webster had been a member of the Federalist Party the National Republican Party and the Whig Party He was among the three members of the Great Triumvirate along with Henry Clay and John C Calhoun Daniel WebsterDaguerreotype of Webster c 184714th and 19thUnited States Secretary of StateIn office July 23 1850 October 24 1852PresidentMillard FillmorePreceded byJohn M ClaytonSucceeded byCharles Magill ConradIn office March 6 1841 May 8 1843PresidentWilliam Henry HarrisonJohn TylerPreceded byJohn ForsythSucceeded byAbel P UpshurChair of the Senate Finance CommitteeIn office December 2 1833 December 5 1836 1 Preceded byJohn ForsythSucceeded bySilas WrightUnited States Senatorfrom MassachusettsIn office March 4 1845 July 22 1850Preceded byRufus ChoateSucceeded byRobert Charles WinthropIn office June 8 1827 February 22 1841Preceded byElijah H MillsSucceeded byRufus ChoateChair of the House Judiciary CommitteeIn office 1823 1827Preceded byHugh NelsonSucceeded byPhilip P BarbourMember of theU S House of RepresentativesIn office March 4 1823 May 30 1827Preceded byBenjamin GorhamSucceeded byBenjamin GorhamConstituencyMassachusetts s 1st districtIn office March 4 1813 March 3 1817Preceded byGeorge SullivanSucceeded byArthur LivermoreConstituencyNew Hampshire s at large districtPersonal detailsBorn 1782 01 18 January 18 1782Salisbury New Hampshire U S DiedOctober 24 1852 1852 10 24 aged 70 Marshfield Massachusetts U S Political partyWhigOther politicalaffiliationsFederalist before 1825 National Republican 1825 1833 SpousesGrace Fletcher m 1808 died 1828 wbr Caroline LeRoy Webster m 1829 wbr Children5 including FletcherEducationDartmouth CollegeSignatureCoat of armsBorn in Salisbury New Hampshire in 1782 Webster established a successful legal practice in Portsmouth New Hampshire after graduating from Dartmouth College and serving a legal apprenticeship A prominent opponent of the War of 1812 he won election to the United States House of Representatives where he served as a leader of the Federalist Party Webster left office after two terms and moved to Boston Massachusetts He became a leading attorney before the U S Supreme Court winning cases such as Dartmouth College v Woodward McCulloch v Maryland and Gibbons v Ogden Webster returned to Congress in 1823 and became a key supporter of President John Quincy Adams He won election to the United States Senate in 1827 and worked with Henry Clay to build the National Republican Party in support of Adams After Andrew Jackson defeated Adams in the 1828 U S presidential election Webster became a leading opponent of Jackson s domestic policies He strongly objected to the theory of nullification espoused by John C Calhoun His 1830 Second Reply to Hayne speech is widely regarded as one of the greatest speeches ever delivered in Congress Webster supported Jackson s defiant response to the Nullification Crisis but broke with the president due to disagreements over the Second Bank of the United States Webster joined with other Jackson opponents in forming the Whig Party and unsuccessfully ran in the 1836 U S presidential election He supported Harrison in the 1840 U S presidential election and was appointed secretary of state after Harrison took office Unlike the other members of Harrison s Cabinet he continued to serve under President Tyler after Tyler broke with congressional Whigs As secretary of state Webster negotiated the Webster Ashburton Treaty which settled border disputes with Britain In 1837 Webster was elected as a member to the American Philosophical Society 2 Webster returned to the Senate in 1845 and resumed his status as a leading congressional Whig During the Mexican American War he emerged as a leader of the Cotton Whigs a faction of Northern Whigs that emphasized good relations with the South over anti slavery policies In 1850 President Fillmore appointed Webster as secretary of state and Webster contributed to the passage of the Compromise of 1850 which settled several territorial issues and enacted a new fugitive slave law The Compromise proved unpopular in much of the North and undermined Webster s standing in his home state Webster sought the Whig nomination in the 1852 U S presidential election but a split between supporters of Fillmore and Webster led to the nomination of General Winfield Scott Webster is widely regarded as an important and talented attorney orator and politician but historians and observers have offered mixed opinions on his moral qualities and ability as a national leader Contents 1 Early life 2 Rise to prominence 3 Congressman and constitutional lawyer 3 1 First stint in the House 1813 1817 3 2 Leading lawyer 3 3 Second stint in the House 1823 1827 4 First period in the Senate 4 1 Adams administration 1827 1829 4 2 Jackson administration 1829 1837 4 2 1 Second Reply to Hayne 4 2 2 Bank War and 1832 election 4 2 3 Nullification Crisis 4 2 4 Rise of the Whig Party and 1836 candidacy 4 3 Van Buren administration 1837 1841 5 Secretary of State in the Tyler administration 6 Second period in the Senate 6 1 Polk administration 1845 1849 6 2 Taylor administration 1849 1850 7 Secretary of State in the Fillmore administration 7 1 Compromise of 1850 7 2 Opening of the New York amp Erie Rail Road 7 3 Foreign affairs 7 4 1852 election 8 Personal life family and religious views 9 Death 10 Legacy 10 1 Historical evaluations 10 2 Memorials 10 3 In media 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 13 1 Works cited 14 Further reading 14 1 Biographies 14 2 Specialized scholarly studies 14 3 Primary sources 15 External linksEarly life editDaniel Webster was born on January 18 1782 in Salisbury New Hampshire at a location within the present day city of Franklin He was the son of Abigail nee Eastman and Ebenezer Webster a farmer and local official who served in the French and Indian War and the American Revolutionary War Ebenezer s ancestor the English born Thomas Webster had migrated to North America around 1636 Ebenezer had three children from a previous marriage who survived to maturity as well as five children from his marriage to Abigail Webster was the second youngest of the eight siblings 3 He was particularly close to his older brother Ezekiel who was born in 1780 4 As a youth he helped work the family farm but was frequently in poor health With the encouragement of his parents and tutors he often read works by authors such as Alexander Pope and Isaac Watts 5 nbsp New Hampshire historical marker number 91 at his birthplace in present day Franklin New HampshireIn 1796 he attended Phillips Exeter Academy a preparatory school in Exeter New Hampshire 6 After studying the classics and other subjects for several months under a clergyman Webster was admitted to Dartmouth College in 1797 7 During his time at Dartmouth he managed the school newspaper and emerged as a strong public speaker 8 He was chosen as the Fourth of July orator in the college town of Hanover in 1800 and his speech contained the substance of the political principles which he would later become famous for developing 9 Like his father and like many other New England farmers Webster was firmly devoted to the Federalist Party and favored a strong central government 10 He graduated from Dartmouth in 1801 and was elected to the Phi Beta Kappa honor society 11 After graduating from Dartmouth he apprenticed under Salisbury lawyer Thomas W Thompson 12 Though unenthusiastic about studying the law he believed that becoming a lawyer would allow him to live comfortably and avoid the bouts of poverty that had afflicted his father 13 In order to help support his brother Ezekiel s study at Dartmouth Webster temporarily resigned from the law office to work as a schoolteacher at Fryeburg Academy in Maine 14 In 1804 he obtained a position in Boston under the prominent attorney Christopher Gore Clerking for Gore who was involved in international national and state politics he learned about many legal and political subjects and met numerous New England politicians 15 He grew to love Boston and in 1805 was admitted to the bar 16 Rise to prominence editSee also Origins of the War of 1812 Immediately after winning admission to the bar Webster set up a legal practice in Boscawen New Hampshire 17 He became increasingly involved in politics and began to speak locally in support of Federalist causes and candidates 18 After his father s death in 1806 he handed over his practice to his brother Ezekiel and opened a new practice in the larger town of Portsmouth 19 Over the decade long period he lived in Portsmouth he handled over 1700 cases becoming one of the most prominent attorneys in New Hampshire 20 Along with two other lawyers he was appointed to revise the New Hampshire criminal code and devise regulations for state prisons 21 nbsp Daniel Webster s home in Portsmouth New Hampshire The home has since been restored and is now part of the Strawbery Banke museum complex During this time the ongoing Napoleonic Wars began to more strongly affect Americans as Britain impeded U S trade with France and impressed American sailors who were allegedly British deserters President Thomas Jefferson retaliated with the Embargo Act of 1807 stopping all trade to both Britain and France As New England relied on commerce with the two nations the region strongly suffered from the embargo and Webster wrote an anonymous pamphlet attacking Jefferson s policies 22 He also campaigned for various Federalist candidates including presidential candidate Charles Cotesworth Pinckney and gubernatorial candidate Jeremiah Smith Although Jefferson s Democratic Republican Party dominated national elections the Federalist Party was competitive throughout the states of New England 23 In 1812 the United States declared war against Britain beginning the War of 1812 On July 4 1812 Webster was invited to give a speech before the Washington Benevolent Society His speech which strongly attacked the war but warned against secession was reprinted in newspapers throughout New England 24 After the speech he was selected as a delegate to the Rockingham Convention a local assembly that issued a report critical of Jefferson s Democratic Republican successor James Madison 25 The Rockingham Memorial which was largely written by Webster challenged Madison s reasons for going to war arguing that France had been just as culpable in impeding American trade as Britain had and raising the specter of secession The Rockingham Memorial gained nationwide notoriety as a document exemplifying New England s opposition to the war 26 After the convention the state Federalist Party nominated him as a candidate for the U S House of Representatives Though Madison won re election in the 1812 U S presidential election the Federalist backed presidential candidate won New England and Federalists swept the New Hampshire elections for the House of Representatives 27 Congressman and constitutional lawyer editFirst stint in the House 1813 1817 edit See also Presidency of James Madison By May 1813 when he arrived in the House of Representatives for the first time the United States had seen numerous setbacks in the War of 1812 Nonetheless Madison s Democratic Republican Party dominated the Thirteenth Congress controlling over three fifths of the seats in the House of Representatives and over two thirds of the seats in the Senate 28 Webster continued to criticize the war and attacked effort to impose conscription wartime taxes and a new trade embargo 29 He was appointed to a steering committee that coordinated Federalist actions in the House of Representatives and by the end of the Thirteenth Congress he had emerged as a respected speaker on the House floor 30 In early 1815 the war came to an end after news of the signing of the Treaty of Ghent reached the United States 31 After the war President Madison called for the establishment of the Second Bank of the United States known as the national bank the imposition of a protective tariff and federally financed public works While Speaker of the House Henry Clay and Congressman John C Calhoun worked to pass Madison s proposals other Democratic Republicans opposed these policies because they conflicted with the party s traditional commitment to a weaker federal government 32 Webster favored a national bank in principle but he voted against the bill that established the national bank because he believed that the bank should be required to remove paper banknotes issued by various state charted banks from circulation Before the national bank came into operation he then led the passage of a bill that required all debts to the government to be paid in specie Treasury notes or notes issued by the national bank 33 In the tariff debate he occupied a middle ground he favored using tariff rates to protect domestic manufacturing but did not want tariff rates to be so high that they would harm his home state s trading concerns Though he took an active role in crafting the tariff bill he ultimately missed the final vote on the Tariff of 1816 34 Seeking more lucrative legal work he began to strongly consider relocating to Boston or New York during his time in Congress 35 In 1816 he declined to seek another term in the House of Representatives instead establishing a new residence in Boston In the 1816 elections the Federalist Party suffered numerous defeats throughout the country and Democratic Republican candidate James Monroe was elected president 36 Leading lawyer edit See also Marshall Court This sir is my case It is the case not merely of that humble institution it is the case of every college in our land Sir you may destroy this little institution it is weak it is in your hands I know it is one of the lesser lights in the literary horizon of our country You may put it out But if you do so you must carry through your work You must extinguish one after another all those greater lights of science which for more than a century have thrown their radiance over our land It is sir as I have said a small college And yet there are those who love it Daniel Webster Dartmouth College v Woodward Webster continued to practice law while serving in the House of Representatives and he argued his first case before the Supreme Court of the United States in early 1814 37 He had been highly regarded in New Hampshire since his days in Boscawen and was respected for his service in the House of Representatives but he came to national prominence as counsel in a number of important Supreme Court cases 38 Between 1814 and 1852 he argued at least one case in the vast majority of the sessions of the Supreme Court he served as counsel in a total of 223 cases and won approximately half of those cases 39 He also represented numerous clients outside of Supreme Court cases including prominent individuals such as George Crowninshield Francis Cabot Lowell and John Jacob Astor 40 Though Congress was dominated by Democratic Republicans Chief Justice John Marshall ensured that the Federalist ideology retained a presence in the courts Webster quickly became skilled at articulating arguments designed to appeal to Marshall and another influential Supreme Court justice Joseph Story 41 He played an important role in eight of the most celebrated constitutional cases decided by the Court between 1814 and 1824 In many of these particularly in Dartmouth College v Woodward 1819 and Gibbons v Ogden 1824 the Supreme Court handed down decisions based largely on his arguments Marshall s most famous declaration the power to tax is the power to destroy in McCulloch v Maryland 1819 was taken from Webster s presentation against the state of Maryland As a result of his series of successes in Supreme Court cases many people began calling him the Great Expounder and Defender of the Constitution 42 He would continue to argue cases before the Supreme Court after Marshall s death in 1835 but he generally found the Taney Court to be less receptive to his arguments 43 In Dartmouth College v Woodward Webster was retained by the Federalist trustees of his alma mater Dartmouth College in their case against the newly elected New Hampshire Democratic Republican state legislature The legislature had passed new laws converting Dartmouth into a state institution by changing the size of the college s trustee body and adding a further board of overseers which they put into the hands of the state senate 44 He argued that the Constitution s Contract Clause prohibited the legislature from altering the college s board of trustees The Marshall Court continuing with its history of limiting states rights and reaffirming the supremacy of the constitutional protection of contract ruled in favor of Dartmouth The ruling set the important precedent that corporations did not as many then held have to justify their privileges by acting in the public interest but were independent of the states 45 nbsp Daniel Webster represented the Second Bank of the United States both in the Congress and before the US Supreme Court as well serving as Director of its Boston branch on which he made out this 3 001 01 draft on July 24 1824 He remained politically active during his time out of Congress serving as a presidential elector meeting with officials like Secretary of War John C Calhoun and delivering a well received speech that attacked high tariffs 46 With the Federalists fading away as a national party the period of Monroe s presidency came to be known as the Era of Good Feelings due to the lack of partisan conflict 36 As the Federalists failed to field a candidate in the 1820 U S presidential election Webster acting in his capacity as a presidential elector cast his vote for Monroe 46 He was then elected as a delegate to the 1820 Massachusetts Constitutional Convention There he spoke in opposition to suffrage for all regardless of property ownership arguing that power naturally follows property and the vote should be limited accordingly but the constitution was amended against his advice 47 He also supported the existing districting of the state senate so that each seat represented an equal amount of property 48 His performance at the convention furthered his reputation In a letter to a mutual friend Joseph Story wrote our friend Webster has gained a noble reputation He was before known as a lawyer but he has now secured the title of an eminent and enlightened statesman 49 In December 1820 he delivered an enthusiastically received address commemorating the bicentennial of the landing of the Mayflower at Plymouth Rock 50 Second stint in the House 1823 1827 edit See also Presidency of James Monroe and Presidency of John Quincy Adams nbsp 1834 portrait by Francis AlexanderAt the behest of Federalist leaders and the business elite in Boston Webster agreed to run for the United States House of Representatives in 1822 He won the election and returned to Congress in December 1823 51 In recognition of his mastery of legal issues Speaker of the House Henry Clay assigned him the chairmanship of the House Judiciary Committee In that role he tried to pass a bill that would relieve Supreme Court justices of having to travel to far flung western districts but his bill did not receive a vote in the House 52 Seeking to re establish his reputation for oratorical prowess on the floor of the House of Representatives he gave a speech supporting the Greek cause in the Greek War of Independence 53 In another speech he attacked the bill imposing the Tariff of 1824 arguing that high tariff rates unfairly benefited manufacturing to the detriment of agriculture and commerce 54 In a third speech he defended the construction of internal improvements by the federal government arguing that roads helped unite the nation both economically and in creating a feeling truly national 55 While a Representative he continued accepting speaking engagements in New England most notably his oration on the fiftieth anniversary of the Battle of Bunker Hill 56 He also continued his legal work though his government service required him to rely more on his law partners 57 In the 1824 U S presidential election the Democratic Republicans split among Clay Calhoun William H Crawford Andrew Jackson and John Quincy Adams 58 Despite their shared connection to Massachusetts Webster had an uneasy relationship with Adams because the latter had left the Federalist Party earlier in his career 59 for his part Adams detested him 60 As no candidate won a majority of the electoral vote the 1824 election was decided in a contingent election held by the House of Representatives a Webster had remained neutral prior to the election but he supported Adams in the contingent election in large part because he viewed Jackson as completely unqualified to be president and Crawford had suffered a major stroke 61 Along with Clay he helped rally members of the House around Adams and Adams was elected on the first ballot of the contingent election 62 In 1825 President Adams set off a partisan realignment by putting forward an ambitious domestic program based on Clay s American System that included a vast network of federally funded infrastructure projects States rights Democratic Republicans including Senator Martin Van Buren and Vice President John C Calhoun strongly opposed the program and rallied around Jackson While some Federalists gravitated to Jackson s camp Webster became the leader of the pro administration forces in the House of Representatives 63 Supporters of Adams became known as National Republicans while Jackson s followers coalesced into the Democratic Party Like many Federalists he did not immediately cast aside his partisan identity as a Federalist but embraced the American System and began to favor protective tariff rates 64 Justus D Doenecke indicates that his newfound support of protective tariffs was the result of his new closeness to the rising mill owning families of the region the Lawrences and the Lowells 25 He also backed the administration s defense of treaty sanctioned Creek Indian land rights against Georgia s expansionist claims 65 First period in the Senate edit nbsp Portion of painting Webster s Reply to Hayne by George P A HealyAdams administration 1827 1829 edit See also Presidency of John Quincy Adams In 1827 the Massachusetts legislature elected him to the United States Senate He was initially reluctant to leave the House of Representatives where he had established seniority and a strong base of power but ultimately accepted election to the Senate 66 After a period of consideration he voted for the Tariff of 1828 which raised tariff rates 67 Prior to the 1828 U S presidential election he worked with Clay to build the National Republican Party across the country While Clay rallied support for the party in the West he emerged as a leading National Republican in the Northeastern states 68 Despite his efforts and those of Clay Democratic candidate Andrew Jackson decisively defeated President Adams in the 1828 election 69 Jackson administration 1829 1837 edit See also Presidency of Andrew Jackson Second Reply to Hayne edit When my eyes shall be turned to behold for the last time the sun in heaven may I not see him shining on the broken and dishonored fragments of a once glorious Union on States dissevered discordant belligerent on a land rent with civil feuds or drenched it may be in fraternal blood Let their last feeble and lingering glance rather behold the gorgeous ensign of the republic not a stripe erased or polluted nor a single star obscured bearing for its motto no such miserable interrogatory as What is all this worth nor those other words of delusion and folly Liberty first and Union afterwards but everywhere spread all over in characters of living light blazing on all its ample folds as they float over the sea and over the land and in every wind under the whole heavens that other sentiment dear to every true American heart Liberty and Union now and for ever one and inseparable Daniel Webster Second Reply to Hayne After Jackson took office Webster opposed most of the measures favored by the new administration including the Indian Removal Act and the establishment of the spoils system 70 The Jackson administration suffered from factionalism between supporters of Secretary of State Van Buren and Vice President Calhoun the latter of whom took a prominent role in propounding the doctrine of nullification Calhoun held that the states had the power to nullify laws and he and his allies sought to nullify the high tariff rates imposed by the Tariff of 1828 which they referred to as the Tariff of Abominations 71 During a debate over land policy in January 1830 South Carolina Senator Robert Y Hayne in an effort to sway the West against the North and the tariff accused the North of attempting to limit Western expansion for their own benefit Hayne served as a surrogate for Vice President Calhoun who could not himself address the Senate on the issue due to his status as the Senate s presiding officer 72 page needed Webster objected to the sectional attack on the North but even more strongly objected to Hayne s pro states rights position Speaking before the Senate he articulated his belief in a perpetual union and attacked the institution of slavery baiting Hayne into expounding on the doctrine of nullification on the Senate floor 73 Replying to his first speech Hayne accused him of making war upon the unoffending South and he asserted that nullification was constitutional because the federal government was ultimately subservient to the states 74 On January 27 Webster delivered his response titled the Second Reply to Hayne He held that the people and not the states held ultimate power and the people had established the Constitution as the supreme law of the land He further argued that the doctrine of nullification approach ed absurdity and by denying power to the federal government would effectively restore the balance of power established under the Articles of Confederation He argued that nullification constituted treason against the United States and would ultimately lead to civil war as state officials would call out the militia to resist federal laws and actions He ended his speech with a call for Liberty and Union now and for ever one and inseparable 75 The Second Reply to Hayne was reprinted thousands of times and was favorably received throughout the country In assessing the speech s impact and popularity some contemporaries compared it to the Federalist Papers 76 Three months after he delivered the Second Reply to Hayne Calhoun openly broke with President Jackson when in response to Jackson s toast of Our Union it be preserved Calhoun replied The Union Next to our liberty the most dear 77 Bank War and 1832 election edit By 1830 he considered Clay to be the likely National Republican nominee in the 1832 U S presidential election though he was skeptical that Clay would be able to defeat the Democratic nominee 78 The establishment of the Anti Masonic Party a third party opposed to both Jackson and Clay added a new factor into the election Some Anti Masonic leaders attempted to recruit him to run for the presidency b but he ultimately declined to run for fear of alienating Clay and other National Republicans 80 Instead he undertook a subtle campaign to win the National Republican nomination planning a tour of the Northeast and the Northwest His angling for the presidency marked the start of an ambivalent relationship between Clay and Webster 81 Nonetheless he urged Clay to accept election to the Senate and the two convinced Nicholas Biddle the president of the national bank to apply for an early renewal of the national bank s charter As Jackson had a long record of opposing the national bank both hoped to make the national bank an issue in the 1832 presidential election Clay was formally nominated by the National Republicans in December 1831 while Jackson was nominated for a second term in 1832 82 Biddle requested a renewal of the national bank s charter in January 1832 setting off what became known as the Bank War 83 With Clay focusing on a tariff bill Webster became the unofficial leader of pro national bank forces in the Senate He helped ensure that Congress approved a renewal of the charter without making any major modifications such as a provision that would allow states to prevent the national bank from establishing branches within their borders 84 Congress approved the charter renewal but as was expected Jackson vetoed the bill in July 1832 Jackson argued the bank was unconstitutional and served to make the rich richer and the potent more powerful On the Senate floor Webster attacked the veto arguing that only the judicial branch could judge a bill s constitutionality 85 Afterward he supported Clay s presidential campaign and continued his efforts on behalf of the national bank but Jackson was re elected by a decisive margin 86 Nullification Crisis edit Though Congress replaced the Tariff of Abominations with the Tariff of 1832 Calhoun and his Nullifier allies remained dissatisfied with tariff rates 87 Shortly after the 1832 presidential election a South Carolina convention passed a resolution declaring the Tariff of 1832 to be null void and no law in South Carolina marking the start of the Nullification Crisis Hayne resigned from the Senate to become the governor of South Carolina while Calhoun took Hayne s former seat in the Senate In December 1832 Jackson issued the Proclamation to the People of South Carolina warning that he would not allow South Carolina to defy federal law Webster strongly approved of the Proclamation telling an audience at Faneuil Hall that Jackson had articulated the true principles of the Constitution and that he would give the president my entire and cordial support in the crisis 88 He strongly supported Jackson s proposed Force Bill which would authorize the president to use force against states that attempted to obstruct federal law At the same time he opposed Clay s efforts to end the crisis by lowering tariff rates as he believed that making concessions to Calhoun s forces would set a bad precedent 89 After a spirited debate between himself and Calhoun Congress passed the Force Bill in February 1833 Soon after it passed the Tariff of 1833 the product of negotiations between Clay and Calhoun the bill called for the gradual lowering of tariffs over a ten year period Although they symbolically nullified the Force Bill South Carolina leaders accepted the new tariff law bringing an end to the Nullification Crisis 90 Rise of the Whig Party and 1836 candidacy edit nbsp 1836 electoral vote resultsAs Calhoun drifted away from the Democratic Party and occasionally cooperated with the National Republicans to oppose Jackson some contemporaries began to refer to Calhoun Webster and Clay as the Great Triumvirate 91 At the same time Webster s alliance with Jackson in the Nullification Crisis caused some observers to wonder if he would join the Democratic Party or found a new party centered on their nationalistic vision 92 Jackson s decision to remove government deposits from the national bank in late 1833 ended any possibility of a Webster Jackson alliance and helped to solidify partisan lines 93 As chairman of the Senate Finance Committee Webster led the Senate s effort to prevent Jackson s secretary of the treasury Roger Taney from removing government deposits 94 As the national bank s charter was due to expire in 1836 before the end of Jackson s term he attempted to save the national bank through a compromise measure but Democrats rejected his proposal Ultimately the Senate was unable to prevent the deposit removals or the expiration of the national bank s charter but it did pass resolutions censuring Jackson and Taney Webster s decision to vote for the censure resolution caused a permanent break with Jackson 95 In the aftermath of the battle over the national bank Jackson s political opponents coalesced into the Whig Party By taking a name rooted in American and British history the Whigs implicitly criticized Jackson as a tyrannical executive 96 Although National Republicans like Clay and Webster formed the core of the Whig Party Anti Masonic leaders like William H Seward and states rights Democrats like John Tyler also joined the new party 97 The Whig Party proved more durable than the National Republican Party and along with the Democrats the Whigs became one of the two major parties of the Second Party System which would extend into the 1850s 98 By 1834 Webster supporters such as Caleb Cushing Rufus Choate Abbott Lawrence and Edward Everett had begun preparing for his candidacy in the 1836 U S presidential election 99 With Clay showing no indication of making another run Webster hoped to become the main Whig candidate in the 1836 election but General William Henry Harrison and Senator Hugh Lawson White retained strong support in the West and the South respectively Rather than uniting behind one presidential candidate Whig leaders settled on a strategy of running multiple candidates in order to force a contingent election in the House of Representatives 100 He was nominated for president by the Massachusetts legislature but Harrison won the backing of most Whigs outside of the South Although his reputation as a national figure was far greater than that of Harrison many Whigs hoped that Harrison s military record would allow him to replicate Jackson s 1832 victory 101 Webster s chances also suffered from his lingering association with the Federalist Party his close relationship with elite politicians and businessmen and his lack of appeal among the broad populace Robert Remini writes that the American public admired and revered him but did not love or trust him 102 With little support outside of his home state he attempted to withdraw his presidential candidacy but to his eventual regret Massachusetts Whig leaders convinced him to stay in the race 103 Meanwhile the 1835 Democratic National Convention nominated Van Buren Jackson s preferred successor for president In the 1836 election Van Buren won a majority of the popular and electoral vote Harrison finished a distant second and White carried two Southern states Webster won only the electoral votes of Massachusetts 104 Adding to his displeasure he lost a major Supreme Court decision Charles River Bridge v Warren Bridge shortly after the election 105 c Van Buren administration 1837 1841 edit See also Presidency of Martin Van Buren External videos nbsp Presentation by Robert Remini on Daniel Webster The Man and His Time October 5 1997 C SPANShortly after Van Buren took office a major economic downturn known as the Panic of 1837 began Webster and his Whig allies blamed Jackson s policies including the Specie Circular for the panic but a worldwide economic downturn was a major contributing factor The panic hit the country hard and proved disastrous for Webster s personal finances 108 With the help of Nicholas Biddle and other friendly bankers Webster had gone into debt to engage in land speculation on a broad scale 109 His debt was exacerbated by his propensity for lavishly furnishing his estate and giving away money with reckless generosity and heedless profusion in addition to indulging the smaller scale passions and appetites of gambling and alcohol 110 The panic resulted in many creditors calling in their loans and according to Remini Webster would never emerge from debt after 1837 111 Nonetheless he remained focused on his political career 108 While Whigs promoted the American System as the means for economic recovery Van Buren s response to the panic focused on the practice of strict economy and frugality 112 Webster attacked Van Buren s proposals to address the economic crisis including the establishment of an Independent Treasury system 113 and he helped arrange for the rescinding of the Specie Circular 114 He entertained hopes of winning the Whig nomination in the 1840 U S presidential election but ultimately declined to challenge Clay or Harrison both of whom commanded broader support within the party 115 He remained neutral between Clay and Harrison instead departing for a trip to Europe where he attended his daughter s wedding and befriended Alexander Baring 1st Baron Ashburton 116 While he was abroad the 1839 Whig National Convention nominated Harrison for president Although many Whigs favored a Harrison Webster ticket the convention instead nominated John Tyler of Virginia for vice president 117 Webster served as a prominent campaign surrogate for Harrison in the 1840 election although he disliked the party s new popular style of campaigning that made use of songs and slogans like Tippecanoe and Tyler too 118 The Whigs enjoyed great success in the 1840 elections as Harrison took a majority of the popular and electoral vote and the party won control of Congress 119 Secretary of State in the Tyler administration editFurther information Presidency of John Tyler nbsp Through the Webster Ashburton Treaty Webster helped bring an end to a boundary dispute in MaineHarrison extensively consulted Webster and Clay regarding presidential appointments and the two Whig leaders competed to place their supporters and allies in key positions Harrison initially hoped that Webster would serve as secretary of the treasury in order to spearhead his economic program but Webster instead became secretary of state giving him oversight of foreign affairs 120 Just one month after taking office Harrison died from pneumonia and was succeeded by John Tyler Though Tyler and Webster strongly differed regarding ideology Tyler was a devotee of states rights and personality they initially enjoyed a strong working relationship partly because each saw Clay as a rival for power in the Whig Party 121 As Tyler a former Democrat had long been skeptical of the need for a national bank Webster urged Whig congressmen to back a compromise bill put forward by Secretary of the Treasury Thomas Ewing which would have re established the national bank but restricted its branching power Congress rejected the compromise and instead passed Clay s bill which was subsequently vetoed by Tyler After Tyler vetoed another Whig bill every Cabinet member except for Webster resigned and a caucus of Whigs voted to expel Tyler from the party in September 1841 When Webster informed Tyler that he would not resign Tyler responded give me your hand on that and now I will say to you that Henry Clay is a doomed man 122 Facing a hostile Congress Tyler and Webster turned their attention to foreign policy 123 The administration put a new emphasis on American influence in the Pacific Ocean reaching the first U S treaty with China seeking to partition Oregon Country with Britain and announcing that the United States would oppose any attempt to colonize the Hawaiian Islands 124 The most pressing foreign policy issue involved relations with Britain as the United States had nearly gone to war with Britain over the Caroline affair and a border conflict between Maine and Canada 125 Seeking improved relations with the United States British Prime Minister Robert Peel dispatched Lord Ashburton on a special mission to the United States 126 After extensive negotiations the United States and Britain reached the Webster Ashburton Treaty which clearly delineated Maine s northern border and other sections of the U S Canada border that had been in dispute 127 Senator Thomas Hart Benton led Senate opposition to the treaty arguing that it needlessly and shamelessly relinquished American territory but few others joined Benton in voting against the treaty and it won ratification 128 After mid 1841 congressional Whigs continually pressured Webster to resign and by early 1843 Tyler had also begun to pressure Webster to leave office 129 As Tyler moved even farther away from Whig positions and began preparing a campaign for the Democratic nomination in the 1844 U S presidential election Webster left office in May 1843 130 With Webster gone Tyler turned his attention to the Texas annexation 131 Clay was nominated for president at the 1844 Whig National Convention 132 while the Democrats spurned both Tyler and former President Van Buren in favor of James K Polk a protege of Andrew Jackson 133 Webster s service in the Tyler administration had badly damaged his credibility among Whigs but he began to rebuild old alliances within the party 134 Tyler s attempts to annex Texas became the key issue in the 1844 election and Webster came out strongly against annexation He campaigned on behalf of Clay telling one crowd I know of no great national constitutional question I know of no great interest of the country in which there is any difference between the distinguished leader of the Whig Party and myself 135 Despite Webster s campaigning Polk defeated Clay in a close election 136 The election of the expansionist Polk ensured the annexation of Texas and annexation was completed after Polk took office 137 Second period in the Senate editPolk administration 1845 1849 edit See also Presidency of James K Polk nbsp Portrait of Daniel Webster commissioned by the Senate in 1955Webster considered retiring from public office after the 1844 election but he accepted election to the United States Senate in early 1845 138 Webster sought to block the adoption of Polk s domestic policies but Congress controlled by Democrats reduced tariff rates through the Walker tariff and re established the Independent Treasury system In May 1846 the Mexican American War began after Congress responding to a clash instigated by U S troops against the Mexican Army at the disputed Texas Mexico border declared war on Mexico 139 During the war Northern Whigs became increasingly split between Conscience Whigs like Charles Sumner who strongly favored anti slavery policies and Cotton Whigs like Webster who emphasized good relations with Southern leaders 140 Webster had been a long standing opponent of slavery in an 1837 speech he called slavery a great moral social and political evil and added that he would vote against any thing that shall extend the slavery of the African race on this continent or add other slaveholding states to the Union 141 But unlike his more strongly anti slavery constituents he did not believe that Congress should interfere with slavery in the states and he placed less emphasis on preventing the spread of slavery into the territories 142 Nonetheless because Webster opposed the acquisition of Mexican territory with the exception of San Francisco he voted against the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in which the United States acquired the Mexican Cession 143 General Zachary Taylor s success in the Mexican American War drove him to the front ranks of Whig candidates in the 1848 U S presidential election 144 As Taylor held unclear political positions and had never been publicly affiliated with the Whig Party Clay and Webster each launched their own bids for the presidency but opposition from the Conscience Whigs badly damaged Webster s standing 145 On the first ballot of the 1848 Whig National Convention Webster finished a distant fourth behind Taylor Clay and General Winfield Scott Taylor ultimately won the presidential nomination on the convention s third ballot while Millard Fillmore of New York was selected as the party s vice presidential nominee 146 After Webster declined the request of Conscience Whigs to lead a new anti slavery third party Conscience Whigs and Barnburner Democrats launched the Free Soil Party and nominated a ticket consisting of former President Van Buren and Charles Francis Adams Despite having previously stated that he would not support Taylor in the 1848 presidential campaign Webster threw his backing behind Taylor Ultimately Taylor won the election defeating both Van Buren and Democratic nominee Lewis Cass 147 Taylor administration 1849 1850 edit See also Presidency of Zachary Taylor I shall stand by the Union with absolute disregard of personal consequences What are personal consequences in comparison with the good or evil that may befall a great country in a crisis like this Let the consequences be what they will No man can suffer too much and no man can fall too soon if he suffer or if he fall in defense of the liberties and constitution of his country Daniel Webster July 17 1850 address to the Senate Having only tepidly endorsed Taylor s campaign Webster was excluded from the new administration s Cabinet and was not consulted on major appointments 148 After the 1848 election the fate of the territories acquired in the Mexican American War became a major subject of debate in Congress as Northern and Southern leaders quarreled over the extension of slavery 149 In January 1850 Clay introduced a plan which combined the major subjects under discussion His legislative package included the admission of California as a free state the cession by Texas of some of its northern and western territorial claims in return for debt relief the establishment of New Mexico and Utah territories a ban on the importation of slaves into the District of Columbia for sale and a more stringent fugitive slave law 150 The plan faced opposition from strongly pro slavery Southern leaders like Calhoun 151 and anti slavery Northerners like William Seward and Salmon Chase 152 President Taylor also opposed Clay s proposal since he favored granting California statehood immediately and denied the legitimacy of Texas s claims over New Mexico 153 Clay had won Webster s backing for his proposal before presenting it to Congress and Webster provided strong support for Clay s bill in the Senate 154 In what became known as the Seventh of March Speech Webster attacked Northerners and Southerners alike for stirring up tensions over slavery He admonished Northerners for obstructing the return of fugitive slaves but attacked Southern leaders for openly contemplating secession 155 After the speech Webster was bitterly attacked by New England abolitionists Theodore Parker complained No living man has done so much to debauch the conscience of the nation while Horace Mann described Webster as a fallen star Lucifer descending from Heaven 156 In contrast to that view James G Blaine wrote a few decades later Mr Webster had in his own lifetime seen the thirteen colonies grow into thirty powerful States He had seen three millions of people enfeebled and impoverished by a long struggle increased eightfold in number surrounded by all the comforts charms and securities of life All this spoke to him of the Union and of its priceless blessings He now heard its advantages discussed its perpetuity doubted its existence threatened Mr Webster felt that a generation had been born who were undervaluing their inheritance and who might by temerity destroy it Under motives inspired by these surroundings he spoke for the preservation of the Union 157 The debate over Clay s compromise proposal continued into July 1850 when Taylor suddenly and unexpectedly died of an illness 158 Secretary of State in the Fillmore administration editFurther information Presidency of Millard Fillmore Compromise of 1850 edit nbsp Daguerreotype photograph of Webster by John Adams Whipple c 1847Millard Fillmore ascended to the presidency upon Taylor s death Shortly after taking office Fillmore dismissed Taylor s Cabinet appointees named Webster as his secretary of state d and came out in favor of Clay s compromise 159 Fillmore chose the remaining members of his Cabinet in consultation with Webster and Webster became the unofficial leader in the Cabinet 160 After Fillmore took office Clay took a temporary leave from the Senate but Democratic Senator Stephen A Douglas of Illinois took the lead in advocating for a compromise based largely on Clay s proposals 161 On behalf of the president Webster drafted a special message to Congress calling for an end to the crisis over the territories and he used the power of patronage to woo potential supporters Soon after the Fillmore administration delivered the special message Congress passed Douglas s legislative package which became known as the Compromise of 1850 162 Due to a prosperous economy and various other trends few Whigs pushed for a revival of the national bank and other long standing party policies during the Fillmore administration and the Compromise of 1850 became the central political issue 163 While Fillmore hoped to reconcile with anti Compromise Northern Whigs Webster sought to purge them from the party and he frequently intervened to block the election or appointment of anti Compromise Whigs 164 In the North the most controversial portion of the Compromise of 1850 was the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 and Webster became closely involved in enforcing the law 165 Disputes over fugitive slaves were widely publicized North and South inflaming passions and raising tensions in the aftermath of the Compromise of 1850 Many of the administration s prosecutions or attempts to return slaves ended badly for the government as in the case of Shadrach Minkins 166 In Massachusetts anti slavery Whigs allied with Democrats and in a major rebuke to Webster elected Free Soil leader Charles Sumner to the Senate 167 Opening of the New York amp Erie Rail Road edit When the New York amp Erie Rail Road was completed in May 1851 President Fillmore and several members of his cabinet including Webster made a special two day excursion run to open the railway It is reported that Webster viewed the entire run from a rocking chair attached to a flatcar with a steamer rug and jug of high quality Medford rum 168 169 At stops he would get down and speechify Foreign affairs edit Fillmore appointed Webster not only for his national stature and pro Compromise position but also for his experience in foreign affairs and Fillmore relied on Webster to guide his administration s foreign policy 170 In the aftermath of the failed Hungarian Revolution of 1848 a diplomatic incident with the Austrian Empire arose over the Taylor administration s sympathetic actions towards the Hungarian rebels Rather than backing down the Fillmore administration secured the release of exiled Hungarian leader Lajos Kossuth from the Ottoman Empire and gave a banquet in Kossuth s honor 171 In 1851 Webster wrote a book about Kossuth s life 172 The administration was particularly active in Asia and the Pacific especially with regard to Japan which prohibited nearly all foreign contact In November 1852 the administration launched the Perry Expedition to force Japan to establish trade relations with the United States 173 Perry was successful in his mission as Japan agreed to open trade relations with the 1854 Convention of Kanagawa 174 The Fillmore administration also reached trade agreements with Latin American countries 175 worked to counter British influence in Central America 176 and took measures to prevent unauthorized military expeditions against Cuba and other Latin American countries 177 An expedition to Cuba led by Narciso Lopez precipitated a diplomatic crisis with Spain but Fillmore Webster and the Spanish government worked out a series of face saving measures that prevented an outbreak of hostilities from occurring 178 1852 election edit nbsp Webster red won the support of several delegates at the 1852 Whig National ConventionEncouraged by Fillmore s professed lack of desire to pursue the Whig nomination in the 1852 U S presidential election Webster launched another campaign for the presidency in 1851 179 Fillmore was sympathetic to the ambitions of his secretary of state but he was unwilling to completely rule out accepting the party s 1852 nomination as he feared doing so would allow his rival William Seward to gain control of the party 180 Another candidate emerged in the form of General Winfield Scott who like previously successful Whig presidential nominees William Henry Harrison and Zachary Taylor had earned fame for his martial accomplishments Scott had supported the Compromise of 1850 but his association with Seward made him unacceptable to Southern Whigs 180 As Southerners retained a lingering distrust of Webster they threw their backing behind Fillmore 181 Thus Scott emerged as the preferred candidate of most Northern Whigs Fillmore became the main candidate of Southern Whigs and Webster was only able to win backing from a handful of delegates most of whom were from New England 182 On the first presidential ballot of the 1852 Whig National Convention Fillmore received 133 of the necessary 147 votes while Scott won 131 and Webster won 29 183 Although both Webster and Fillmore were willing to withdraw in favor of the other their respective delegates at the convention were unable to unite around one candidate and Scott took the nomination on the 53rd ballot 184 Webster was personally devastated by the defeat and he refused to endorse Scott s candidacy 185 Webster allowed various third party groups to nominate him for president although he did not openly condone these efforts 186 Scott proved to be a poor candidate and he suffered the worst defeat in Whig history losing to Democratic nominee Franklin Pierce 187 Thousands of anti Scott Whigs and members of the nativist Native American Party cast their vote for Webster 188 Personal life family and religious views editIf we work upon marble it will perish if we work upon brass time will efface it if we rear temples they will crumble to dust but if we work on men s immortal minds if we impress on them with high principles the just fear of God and love for their fellow men we engrave on those tablets something which no time can efface and which will brighten and brighten to all eternity Daniel Webster May 22 1852 nbsp Grace FletcherIn 1808 Webster married Grace Fletcher a schoolteacher and the daughter of a New Hampshire clergyman 189 Between 1810 and 1822 Daniel and Grace had five children Grace Daniel Fletcher Julia Edward and Charles Grace and Charles died before reaching adulthood 190 Webster s wife Grace died in January 1828 due to a cancerous tumor 191 and Webster suffered another loss when his brother Ezekiel died in April 1829 192 In December 1829 Webster married Caroline LeRoy the 32 year old daughter of a New York merchant They remained married until Webster s death and she lived until 1882 She and Webster had two children together another daughter named Grace and a son named Noah Webster 193 After the death of his first wife Webster was frequently the subject of rumors in Washington regarding his alleged promiscuity many suspected that the painter Sarah Goodridge with whom he had a close relationship was his mistress 194 Webster and his family lived in Portsmouth until 1816 when they relocated to Boston 195 In 1831 Webster purchased a 150 acre estate now known as the Thomas Webster Estate in Marshfield Massachusetts In the ensuing years Webster spent much of his earnings making various improvements to his estate and he made it his primary residence in 1837 After 1829 Webster also owned his father s home The Elms in Franklin New Hampshire 196 Webster s older son Fletcher married a niece of Joseph Story established a profitable law practice served as chief clerk of the State Department and was the only one of his siblings to outlive his father 197 Fletcher died at the 1862 Second Battle of Bull Run while serving as a colonel in the Union army 198 Webster s younger son Edward died of typhoid fever in January 1848 while serving in the Mexican American War 199 Webster s daughter Julia married Samuel Appleton Appleton but died of tuberculosis in April 1848 200 Conflicting opinions have been voiced as to his religion The Unitarian Universalist Church citing Unitarianism in America from 1902 claim him as their own 201 Another source the 1856 biography The American Statesman The Life and Character of Daniel Webster proclaims him an avowed orthodox Trinitarian baptized and raised in an Orthodox Congregational Church and who died a member of the Episcopal Church 202 Remini writes that though Webster occasionally attended other churches he remained closely affiliated with the Congregational church throughout his life In an 1807 letter to a Congregational pastor Webster wrote I believe in the utter inability of any human being to work out his own Salvation without the constant aids of the spirit of all grace Although I have great respect for some other forms of worship I believe the Congregational mode on the whole to be preferable to any other 203 Death editBy early 1852 Webster had begun to suffer from cirrhosis of the liver and his poor health increasingly made it difficult for him to serve as secretary of state In September 1852 Webster returned to his Marshfield estate where his health continued to decline due to cirrhosis and a subdural hematoma 204 He died in Marshfield Massachusetts on October 24 1852 at the age of 70 and is buried in Winslow Cemetery near his estate His last words were I still live 205 Legacy edit nbsp Daniel Webster monument Central Park New York City from the base Liberty and Union Now and Forever One and Inseparable nbsp Webster Hall at Dartmouth College Historical evaluations edit Secession Peaceable secession Sir your eyes and mine are never destined to see that miracle The dismemberment of this vast country without convulsion There can be no such thing as a peaceable secession Peaceable secession is an utter impossibility We could not separate the states by any such line if we were to draw it Daniel Webster March 7 1850 A Plea for Harmony and Peace Remini writes that whether men hated or admired Webster all agreed on the majesty of his oratory the immensity of his intellectual powers and the primacy of his constitutional knowledge 206 Ralph Waldo Emerson who had criticized Webster following the Seventh of March address remarked in the immediate aftermath of his death that Webster was the completest man and that nature had not in our days or not since Napoleon cut out such a masterpiece 207 In Profiles in Courage John F Kennedy called Webster s defense of the Compromise of 1850 despite the risk to his presidential ambitions and the denunciations he faced from the North one of the greatest acts of courageous principle in the history of the Senate 208 Conversely Seventh of March has been criticized by Henry Cabot Lodge who contrasted the speech s support of the 1850 compromise with his 1833 rejection of similar measures While he was brave and true and wise in 1833 said Lodge in 1850 he was not only inconsistent but that he erred deeply in policy and statesmanship in his advocacy of a policy that made war inevitable by encouraging slave holders to believe that they could always obtain anything they wanted by a sufficient show of violence 209 Several historians suggest Webster failed to exercise leadership for any political issue or vision Lodge describes Webster s susceptibility to outside influences that formed such an odd trait in the character of a man so imperious by nature When acting alone he spoke his own opinions When in a situation where public opinion was concentrated against him he submitted to modifications of his views with a curious and indolent indifference 210 Similarly Arthur Schlesinger cites Webster s letter requesting retainers for fighting for the national bank one of his most inveterate causes he then asks how Webster could expect the American people to follow him through hell or high water when he would not lead unless someone made up a purse for him 211 Remini writes that Webster was a thoroughgoing elitist and he reveled in it 212 Webster retains his high prestige in some recent historiography Baxter argues that his nationalistic view of the union as one and inseparable from liberty helped the union to triumph over the states rights Confederacy making it his greatest contribution 213 Bartlett however emphasizing Webster s private life says his great oratorical achievements were in part undercut by his improvidence with money his excessively opulent lifestyle and his numerous conflict of interest situations 214 Remini points out that Webster s historical orations taught Americans their history before textbooks were widely available 215 In 1957 a Senate Committee headed by then Senator John F Kennedy named Webster Clay Calhoun Robert M La Follette and Robert A Taft as the five greatest senators in history portraits of the famous five were added to the Senate Reception Room 216 While evaluations on his political career vary Webster is widely praised for his talent as an orator and attorney Former Solicitor General Seth P Waxman writes that in the realm of advocacy Webster doesn t merely sit in the Pantheon He is Zeus himself 217 Kennedy praised Webster s ability to make alive and supreme the latent sense of oneness of union that all Americans felt but few could express 218 219 Webster s Reply to Hayne in 1830 was generally regarded as the most eloquent speech ever delivered in Congress and was a stock exercise for oratory students for 75 years 220 Schlesinger however notes that he is also an example of the limitations of formal oratory Congress heard Webster or Clay with admiration but they rarely prevailed at the vote Plainer speech and party solidarity were more effective and Webster never approached Jackson s popular appeal 221 Memorials edit Main article List of things named for Daniel Webster Webster s legacy has been commemorated with statues and other memorials A statue stands in the National Statuary Hall Collection while another statue stands in Central Park Another Webster statue is located outside the Massachusetts State House The USS Daniel Webster SSBN 626 and the liberty ship SS Daniel Webster were both named for Webster The first Webster postage stamp was issued in 1870 In all Daniel Webster is honored on 14 different US postage issues more than most U S Presidents There is a Daniel Webster Highway and Mount Webster in New Hampshire 222 223 There are 27 towns named for Webster in California Florida Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Maine Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Nebraska New Hampshire New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Pennsylvania South Dakota Texas Virginia and West Virginia including two in Wisconsin Webster Burnett County and Webster Vernon County a ghost town in Colorado and Webster and Webster Hollow in Tennessee Seven counties or parishes are named for Webster Daniel Webster Elementary School in Marshfield Massachusetts bears his name Daniel Webster has been honored on numerous U S Postage stamps nbsp Issue of 1879 nbsp Issue of 1890 nbsp Issue of 1903 nbsp Issue of 1932 nbsp Issue of 1969In media edit Webster is the major character in a fictional short story The Devil and Daniel Webster by Stephen Vincent Benet It serves as the basis for a one act opera of the same name written by American composer Douglas Moore Webster is briefly discussed in Chapter XIX of MacKinlay Kantor s Pulitzer Prize winning novel Andersonville 1955 On film Webster has been portrayed by George MacQuarrie in The Mighty Barnum 1934 Sidney Toler in The Gorgeous Hussy 1936 Emmett Vogan in The Monroe Doctrine 1939 Harry Humphries in Abe Lincoln in Illinois 1940 Edward Arnold in The Devil and Daniel Webster 1941 Anthony Hopkins in Shortcut to Happiness 2007 John Rubinstein in Chilling Adventures of Sabrina Episode The Trial of Sabrina Spellman See also edit nbsp Conservatism portalList of deaths through alcohol Origins of the American Civil War Webster Sainte Lague methodNotes edit Under the Constitution the House can select from the top three electoral vote winners in a contingent election for president Thus Jackson Adams and Crawford were eligible to be selected while Clay was not Calhoun dropped out early in the campaign and won election as vice president Unlike Jackson and Clay he was not a member of a Masonic fraternity 79 Aside from Charles River Bridge v Warren Bridge other major cases he argued before the Taney Court include Thurlow v Massachusetts 106 and Luther v Borden 107 Webster s service in the Fillmore administration made him the first individual to serve as secretary of state under three different presidents James G Blaine would later match Webster s feat of serving as secretary of state under three different presidents References edit Membership of the Finance Committee By Congress and Session PDF United States Senate Committee on Finance Retrieved May 2 2016 APS Member History American Philosophical Society Retrieved August 24 2022 Remini 1997 pp 29 33 Remini 1997 pp 47 48 Remini 1997 pp 35 37 Remini 1997 pp 38 40 Remini 1997 pp 41 42 Remini 1997 pp 49 53 nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Webster Daniel Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 28 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 459 462 Remini 1997 pp 53 54 Remini 1997 pp 55 56 Remini 1997 pp 58 59 Remini 1997 pp 58 59 66 67 Remini 1997 pp 60 61 Lodge 1883 p 12 Remini 1997 pp 73 77 Remini 1997 pp 78 79 Cheek H Lee Jr Webster Daniel In Schultz David ed Encyclopedia of American Law New York Facts On File Inc 2002 Facts On File Inc American History Online Remini 1997 pp 83 84 Remini 1997 pp 89 90 Remini 1997 p 97 Norton 2005 A People amp A Nation p 228 Remini 1997 pp 95 96 Remini 1997 pp 96 99 a b Daniel Webster Discovering Biography Online Edition Gale 2003 Student Resource Center Thomson Gale June 16 2006 Remini 1997 pp 100 101 Remini 1997 pp 101 102 Remini 1997 pp 103 105 Remini 1997 pp 107 109 112 113 Remini 1997 pp 109 120 122 Remini 1997 pp 131 132 Remini 1997 pp 135 136 141 Remini 1997 pp 136 137 Remini 1997 pp 137 140 Remini 1997 p 131 a b Remini 1997 pp 141 145 Remini 1997 pp 115 117 Daniel Webster in American Eras Volume 5 The Reform Era and Eastern U S Development 1815 1850 Gale Research 1998 Student Resource Center Thomson Gale June 16 2006 Remini 1997 p 119 Remini 1997 pp 145 146 Remini 1997 pp 116 118 Remini 1997 pp 162 208 Remini 1997 pp 443 444 Baker Thomas E Dartmouth College v Woodward In Schultz David ed Encyclopedia of American Law New York Facts On File Inc 2002 Facts On File Inc American History Online O Brien Patrick K gen ed Dartmouth College case Encyclopedia of World History Copyright George Philip Limited New York Facts On File Inc 2000 Facts On File Inc World History Online Schlesinger Age of Jackson p 324 5 a b Remini 1997 pp 170 171 Schlesinger 1945 pp 12 15 Lodge 1883 p 113 Lodge 1883 p 38 Remini 1997 pp 178 185 Remini 1997 pp 198 200 Remini 1997 pp 213 214 Remini 1997 pp 210 211 215 217 Remini 1997 pp 221 224 Remini 1997 pp 243 244 Remini 1997 pp 247 251 Remini 1997 p 254 Remini 1997 pp 211 212 Remini 1997 pp 197 Remini 1997 p 226 Remini 1997 pp 230 231 237 Remini 1997 pp 238 241 Remini 1997 pp 255 261 Remini 1997 pp 269 272 Lodge 1883 p 49 Remini 1997 pp 277 281 Remini 1997 pp 295 299 Remini 1997 pp 273 277 Remini 1997 pp 301 302 Remini 1997 pp 313 315 334 Remini 1997 pp 313 314 Schouler James 1891 History of the United States New York Dodd Mead amp Company Remini 1997 pp 318 320 Remini 1997 pp 321 324 Remini 1997 pp 325 328 Remini 1997 pp 329 330 Remini 1997 p 335 Remini 1997 pp 336 337 341 Remini 1997 p 339 Remini 1997 pp 339 340 Remini 1997 pp 341 342 Remini 1997 pp 344 345 Remini 1997 pp 345 356 Remini 1997 pp 360 363 Remini 1997 pp 363 368 Remini 1997 pp 370 371 Howe 2007 pp 400 404 Remini 1997 pp 372 374 Remini 1997 pp 374 377 Remini 1997 pp 381 387 Remini 1997 p 359 Remini 1997 pp 374 387 388 Cole 1993 pp 202 203 Remini 1997 pp 401 408 409 Remini 1997 pp 410 412 Remini 1997 pp 413 415 420 Cole 1993 pp 211 213 Howe 2007 p 390 Remini 1997 pp 425 426 Remini 1997 pp 427 429 Remini 1997 pp 430 431 439 440 Remini 1997 pp 450 451 Remini 1997 pp 444 448 Remini 1997 pp 448 449 Remini 1997 pp 459 461 Remini 1997 p 605 Remini 1997 p 640 a b Remini 1997 pp 466 467 Remini 1997 pp 452 453 Lodge 1883 p 118 Remini 1997 p 466 Howe 2007 pp 505 506 Remini 1997 pp 470 472 Remini 1997 pp 478 479 Remini 1997 pp 483 484 Remini 1997 pp 487 497 Remini 1997 pp 501 502 Remini 1997 pp 505 507 Howe 2007 p 575 Remini 1997 pp 511 515 Remini 1997 pp 521 524 Remini 1997 pp 524 531 Peterson 1989 pp 113 145 Peterson 1989 pp 135 143 Remini 1997 pp 518 519 Remini 1997 pp 542 543 Peterson 1989 pp 122 123 128 Peterson 1989 pp 129 130 Remini 1997 pp 551 583 Remini 1997 pp 583 584 Peterson 1989 pp 186 187 Peterson 1989 pp 221 222 Howe 2007 pp 683 684 Remini 1997 pp 584 586 Remini 1997 pp 591 596 Peterson 1989 pp 243 244 Peterson 1989 pp 255 258 Remini 1997 pp 599 602 Remini 1997 pp 618 623 Remini 1997 pp 624 626 Remini 1997 p 464 Remini 1997 pp 664 665 Remini 1997 p 646 Remini 1997 pp 631 632 Remini 1997 pp 637 639 Remini 1997 pp 651 652 Remini 1997 pp 653 656 Remini 1997 pp 656 660 Remini 1997 pp 658 659 Smith 1988 pp 111 112 Smith 1988 pp 112 113 117 Smith 1988 pp 119 120 Smith 1988 pp 136 142 Remini 1997 pp 665 666 Remini 1997 pp 669 673 Kennedy 2004 Profiles in Courage pp 69 70 Blaine James Gillespie Twenty Years of Congress Vol 1 Ch V Remini 1997 p 683 Remini 1997 pp 684 687 Remini 1997 pp 689 690 Smith 1988 pp 177 181 Remini 1997 pp 691 695 Holt 1999 pp 686 688 738 Holt 1999 pp 635 636 Remini 1997 pp 695 696 Smith 1988 pp 208 213 Remini 1997 pp 706 707 Stover John F 1995 History of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Purdue University Press p 74 ISBN 9781557530660 Stover John F 1999 The Routledge Historical Atlas of the American Railroads Psychology Press p 70 ISBN 9780415921404 Remini 1997 p 689 Remini 1997 pp 698 705 Webster Daniel 1851 Sketch of the Life of Louis Kossuth Governor of Hungary Together with the Declaration of Hungarian Independence Kossuth s Address to the People of the United States All His Great Speeches in England and the Letter of Daniel Webster to Chevalier Hulsemann Stringer amp Townsend Smith 1988 pp 96 98 Remini 1997 p 713 Remini 1997 p 722 Remini 1997 pp 713 716 Remini 1997 pp 718 720 Smith 1988 pp 227 229 Remini 1997 pp 724 725 a b Smith 1988 pp 239 244 Holt 1999 pp 681 682 Remini 1997 pp 735 736 Smith 1988 pp 244 247 Remini 1997 pp 736 739 Remini 1997 pp 739 741 755 Gienapp 1988 pp 20 21 Holt 1999 pp 754 755 Gienapp 1988 pp 29 30 Remini 1997 pp 86 89 Remini 1997 p 13 Remini 1997 pp 285 288 291 Remini 1997 p 305 Remini 1997 pp 310 311 758 Remini 1997 pp 306 309 Remini 1997 pp 144 145 Remini 1997 pp 346 352 Remini 1997 pp 452 520 Remini 1997 p 758 Remini 1997 pp 626 627 642 Remini 1997 pp 485 643 Cooke George 1902 Unitarianism in America Kessinger Publishing p 271 ISBN 1 4191 9210 8 Banvard Joseph 1856 The American Statesman The Life and Character of Daniel Webster Gould and Lincoln etc etc pp 302 303 306 Remini 1997 pp 86 88 Remini 1997 pp 753 756 761 Remini 1997 pp 759 760 Remini 1997 p 9 Mott Wesley T and Burkholder Robert E eds Emersonian Circles Essays in Honor of Joel Myerson University of Rochester Press 1997 p 60 Andrew Glass March 6 2007 This Day on Capitol Hill March 7 POLITICO Retrieved April 6 2023 Lodge 1883 pp 103 105 Lodge 1883 p 18 Schlesinger 1945 p 84 Remini 1997 pp 352 353 Maurice G Baxter One and Inseparable Daniel Webster and the Union 1984 Irving H Bartlett Daniel Webster 1978 Remini 1997 p 187 The Famous Five United States Senate Retrieved December 19 2018 Waxman Seth P 2001 In the Shadow of Daniel Webster Arguing Appeals in the Twenty First Century J App Prac amp Process 3 523 Kennedy 2004 Profiles in Courage p 58 Lodge 1883 p 66 Allan Nevins Ordeal of the Union 1947 1 288 Schlesinger 1945 pp 50 52 Smithsonian National Postal Museum Arago si edu Retrieved January 3 2011 Scotts US Stamp Catalogue Works cited edit Cole Donald B 1993 The Presidency of Andrew Jackson University Press of Kansas ISBN 0 7006 0600 9 Gienapp William E 1988 The Origins of the Republican Party 1852 1856 Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195055016 Holt Michael 1999 The Rise and Fall of the American Whig Party Jacksonian Politics and the Onset of the Civil War Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199772032 Howe Daniel Walker 2007 What Hath God Wrought The Transformation of America 1815 1848 Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199743797 Lodge Henry Cabot 1883 Daniel Webster Houghton Mifflin OCLC 16440580 Peterson Norma Lois 1989 The Presidencies of William Henry Harrison and John Tyler University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 0400 5 Remini Robert V 1997 Daniel Webster The Man and His Time W W Norton amp Company ISBN 0 393 04552 8 Schlesinger Arthur M 1945 The Age of Jackson Little Brown and Company ISBN 9780316773430 Smith Elbert B 1988 The Presidencies of Zachary Taylor amp Millard Fillmore University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 0362 6 Further reading editBiographies edit Bartlett Irving H Daniel Webster 1978 online edition Archived July 29 2012 at the Wayback Machine Baxter Maurice G Webster Daniel American National Biography Online Feb 2000 online edition at academic libraries Baxter Maurice G One and Inseparable Daniel Webster and the Union 1984 Brands H W 2018 Heirs of the Founders The Epic Rivalry of Henry Clay John Calhoun and Daniel Webster the Second Generation of American Giants Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group ISBN 978 0385542548 Current Richard Nelson Daniel Webster and the Rise of National Conservatism 1955 short biography Curtis George Ticknor Life of Daniel Webster 1870 useful for quotations online edition vol 1 Archived May 18 2011 at the Wayback Machine online edition vol 2 Archived July 21 2012 at the Wayback Machine Fuess Claude Moore Daniel Webster 2 vols 1930 scholarly biography Ogg Frederic Austin Daniel Webster 1914 online edition old scholarly biography Paul Joel Richard Indivisible Daniel Webster and the Birth of American Nationalism 2022 Review Peterson Merrill D The Great Triumvirate Webster Clay and Calhoun 1983 Remini Robert V Daniel Webster The Man and His Time 1997 Specialized scholarly studies edit Arntson Paul and Craig R Smith The Seventh of March Address A Mediating Influence Southern Speech Communication Journal 40 Spring 1975 288 301 Bartlett Irving H Daniel Webster as a Symbolic Hero New England Quarterly 45 December 1972 484 507 in JSTOR Baxter Maurice G Daniel Webster and the Supreme Court 1966 Birkner Michael Daniel Webster and the Crisis of Union 1850 Historical New Hampshire 37 Summer Fall 1982 151 73 Brauer Kinley J The Webster Lawrence Feud A Study in Politics and Ambitions Historian 29 November 1966 34 59 Brown Thomas Daniel Webster Conservative Whig In Politics and Statesmanship Essays on the American Whig Party 1985 pp 49 92 online Carey Robert Lincoln Daniel Webster as an Economist 1929 online edition Dalzell Robert F Jr Daniel Webster and the Trial of American Nationalism 1843 1852 1973 Dubofsky Melvyn Daniel Webster and the Whig Theory of Economic Growth 1828 1848 New England Quarterly 42 December 1969 551 72 in JSTOR Eisenstadt Arthur A Daniel Webster and the Seventh of March Southern Speech Journal 20 Winter 1954 136 47 Fields Wayne The Reply to Hayne Daniel Webster and the Rhetoric of Stewardship Political Theory 11 February 1983 5 28 in JSTOR Foster Herbert D Webster s Seventh of March Speech and the Secession Movement 1850 American Historical Review 27 January 1922 245 70 in JSTOR Formisano Ronald P The Transformation of Political Culture Massachusetts Parties 1790s 1840s 1983 Jones Howard To the Webster Ashburton Treaty A Study in Anglo American Relations 1783 1843 1977 251 pp Nathans Sydney Daniel Webster and Jacksonian Democracy 1973 Nathans Sydney Daniel Webster Massachusetts Man New England Quarterly 39 June 1966 161 81 in JSTOR Nevins Allan Ordeal of the Union Fruits of Manifest Destiny 1847 1852 1947 highly detailed narrative of national politics Parish Peter J Daniel Webster New England and the West Journal of American History 54 December 1967 524 49 in JSTOR Prince Carl E and Seth Taylor Daniel Webster the Boston Associates and the U S Government s Role in the Industrializing Process 1815 1830 Journal of the Early Republic 2 Fall 1982 283 99 in JSTOR Rakestraw Donald A Daniel Webster Defender of Peace Lanham MD Rowman and Littlefield 2018 Shade William G The Second Party System in Paul Kleppner ed Evolution of American Electoral Systems 1983 Sheidley Harlow W The Webster Hayne Debate Recasting New England s Sectionalism New England Quarterly 1994 67 1 5 29 in Jstor Sheidley Harlow W Congress only can declare war and the President is Commander in Chief Daniel Webster and the War Power Diplomatic History 12 Fall 1988 383 409 Shewmaker Kenneth E Forging the Great Chain Daniel Webster and the Origins of American Foreign Policy toward East Asia and the Pacific 1841 1852 Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 129 September 1985 225 59 Shewmaker Kenneth E ed Daniel Webster The Completest Man 1990 specialized studies by scholars Simpson Brooks D Daniel Webster and the Cult of the Constitution Journal of American Culture 15 Spring 1992 15 23 online in Blackwell Synergy Smith Craig R Daniel Webster s Epideictic Speaking A Study in Emerging Whig Virtues online edition Smith Craig R Daniel Webster and the Oratory of Civil Religion 2005 300pp Smith Craig R Daniel Webster s July 17th Address A Mediating Influence in the 1850 Compromise Quarterly Journal of Speech 71 August 1985 349 61 Smith Craig R Defender of the Union The Oratory of Daniel Webster 1989 Szasz Ferenc M Daniel Webster Architect of America s Civil Religion Historical New Hampshire 34 Fall Winter 1979 223 43 Wilson Major L Of Time and the Union Webster and His Critics in the Crisis of 1850 Civil War History 14 December 1968 293 306 ch 1 of Wilson Space Time and Freedom The Quest for Nationality and the Irrepressible Conflict 1815 1861 1974 online editionPrimary sources edit Select Speeches of Daniel Webster 1817 1845 edited by A J George 1903 online at Project Gutenberg Contains Defence of the Kennistons The Dartmouth College Case First Settlement of New England The Bunker Hill Monument The Reply to Hayne The Murder of Captain Joseph White The Constitution Not a Compact Between Sovereign States Speech at Saratoga and Eulogy on Mr Justice Story The works of Daniel Webster edited in 6 vol by Edward Everett Boston Little Brown and company 1853 online edition McIntyre J W ed The Writings and Speeches of Daniel Webster 18 vols 1903 vol 8 online Tefft B F ed The Speeches of Daniel Webster and His Master Pieces Alta ed Philadelphia Penn Porter and Coates 1854 Van Tyne Claude H ed The Letters of Daniel Webster from Documents Owned Principally by the New Hampshire Historical Society 1902 online edition Webster Fletcher ed The Private Correspondence of Daniel Webster 2 vols 1857 online edition vol 1 Wiltse Charles M Harold D Moser and Kenneth E Shewmaker Diplomatic papers eds The Papers of Daniel Webster 1974 1989 Published for Dartmouth College by the University Press of New England ser 1 Correspondence v 1 1798 1824 v 2 1825 1829 v 3 1830 1834 v 4 1835 1839 v 5 1840 1843 v 6 1844 1849 v 7 1850 1852 ser 2 Legal papers v 1 The New Hampshire practice v 2 The Boston practice v 3 The federal practice 2 v ser 3 Diplomatic papers v 1 1841 1843 v 2 1850 1852 ser 4 Speeches and formal writings v 1 1800 1833 v 2 1834 1852 External links editDaniel Webster at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp News from Wikinews nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Textbooks from Wikibooks nbsp Resources from Wikiversity Daniel Webster Estate Daniel Webster A Resource Guide from the Library of Congress Works by Daniel Webster at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Daniel Webster at Internet Archive Webster Hayne debate 1830 on nullification amp tariff The works of Daniel Webster 6 vol 1853 edition The private correspondence of Daniel Webster ed by Fletcher Webster 2v 1857 edition Portrait of Daniel Webster painted by William Willard circa 1839 1985United States Congress Daniel Webster id W000238 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Daniel Webster Speeches Collection from the University of Missouri Division of Special Collections and Rare BooksU S House of RepresentativesPreceded byGeorge Sullivan Member of the U S House of Representativesfrom New Hampshire s at large congressional district1813 1817 Succeeded byArthur LivermorePreceded byBenjamin Gorham Member of the U S House of Representativesfrom Massachusetts s 1st congressional district1823 1827 Succeeded byBenjamin GorhamPreceded byHugh Nelson Chair of the House Judiciary Committee1823 1827 Succeeded byPhilip P BarbourU S SenatePreceded byElijah H Mills U S Senator Class 1 from Massachusetts1827 1841 Served alongside Nathaniel Silsbee John Davis Succeeded byRufus ChoatePreceded byJohn Forsyth Chair of the Senate Finance Committee1833 1836 Succeeded bySilas WrightPreceded byRufus Choate U S Senator Class 1 from Massachusetts1845 1850 Served alongside John Davis Succeeded byRobert C WinthropPolitical officesPreceded byJohn Forsyth United States Secretary of State1841 1843 Succeeded byAbel P UpshurPreceded byJohn M Clayton United States Secretary of State1850 1852 Succeeded byEdward Everett Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Daniel Webster amp oldid 1206033794, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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