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John C. Calhoun

John Caldwell Calhoun (/kælˈhn/;[1] March 18, 1782 – March 31, 1850) was an American statesman and political theorist who served as the seventh vice president of the United States from 1825 to 1832. Born in South Carolina, he adamantly defended American slavery and sought to protect the interests of white Southerners. Calhoun began his political career as a nationalist, modernizer and proponent of a strong federal government and protective tariffs. In the late 1820s, his views changed radically, and he became a leading proponent of states' rights, limited government, nullification, and opposition to high tariffs. Calhoun saw Northern acceptance of those policies as a condition of the South's remaining in the Union. His beliefs heavily influenced the South's secession from the Union in 1860 and 1861. He was the first of two vice presidents to resign from the position, the second being Spiro Agnew, who resigned in 1973.

John C. Calhoun
Portrait c. 1845
7th Vice President of the United States
In office
March 4, 1825 – December 28, 1832
President
Preceded byDaniel D. Tompkins
Succeeded byMartin Van Buren
United States Senator
from South Carolina
In office
November 26, 1845 – March 31, 1850
Preceded byDaniel Elliott Huger
Succeeded byFranklin H. Elmore
In office
December 29, 1832 – March 3, 1843
Preceded byRobert Y. Hayne
Succeeded byDaniel Elliott Huger
16th United States Secretary of State
In office
April 1, 1844 – March 10, 1845
PresidentJohn Tyler
James K. Polk
Preceded byAbel P. Upshur
Succeeded byJames Buchanan
10th United States Secretary of War
In office
December 8, 1817 – March 4, 1825
PresidentJames Monroe
Preceded byGeorge Graham (acting)
William H. Crawford
Succeeded byJames Barbour
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from South Carolina's 6th district
In office
March 4, 1811 – November 3, 1817
Preceded byJoseph Calhoun
Succeeded byEldred Simkins
Personal details
Born
John Caldwell Calhoun

(1782-03-18)March 18, 1782
Abbeville, South Carolina, U.S.
DiedMarch 31, 1850(1850-03-31) (aged 68)
Washington, D.C., U.S.
Resting placeSt. Philip's Church
Political partyDemocratic-Republican (before 1828)
Democratic (1828, 1839–1850)
Nullifier (1828–1839)
Spouse
(m. 1811)
Children10, including Anna Maria Calhoun Clemson
Parent(s)Patrick Calhoun
Martha Caldwell
EducationYale College
Litchfield Law School
Signature

Calhoun began his political career with election to the House of Representatives in 1810. As a prominent leader of the war hawk faction, he strongly supported the War of 1812. Calhoun served as Secretary of War under President James Monroe and, in that position, reorganized and modernized the War Department. He was a candidate for the presidency in the 1824 election. After failing to gain support, Calhoun agreed to be a candidate for vice president. The Electoral College elected him vice president by an overwhelming majority. He served under John Quincy Adams and continued under Andrew Jackson, who defeated Adams in the election of 1828, making Calhoun the most recent U.S. vice president to serve under two different presidents.

He had a difficult relationship with Jackson, primarily because of the Nullification Crisis and the Petticoat affair. In contrast with his previous nationalist sentiments, Calhoun vigorously supported South Carolina's right to nullify federal tariff legislation that he believed unfairly favored the North, which put him into conflict with Unionists such as Jackson. In 1832, with only a few months remaining in his second term, Calhoun resigned as vice president and entered the Senate. He sought the Democratic Party nomination for the presidency in 1844 but lost to surprise nominee James K. Polk, who won the general election. Calhoun served as Secretary of State under President John Tyler from 1844 to 1845, and in that role supported the annexation of Texas as a means to extend the Slave Power and helped to settle the Oregon boundary dispute with Britain. Calhoun returned to the Senate, where he opposed the Mexican–American War, the Wilmot Proviso and the Compromise of 1850 before he died of tuberculosis in 1850. He often served as a virtual independent who variously aligned as needed, with Democrats and Whigs.

Later in life, Calhoun became known as the "cast-iron man" for his rigid defense of white Southern beliefs and practices.[2][3] His concept of republicanism emphasized proslavery thought and minority states' rights as embodied by the South. He owned dozens of slaves in Fort Hill, South Carolina, and asserted that slavery, rather than being a "necessary evil", was a "positive good" that benefited both slaves and enslavers.[4] To protect minority rights against majority rule, he called for a concurrent majority by which the minority could block some proposals that it felt infringed on their liberties. To that end, Calhoun supported states' rights, and nullification, through which states could declare null and void federal laws that they viewed as unconstitutional. He was one of the "Great Triumvirate" or the "Immortal Trio" of congressional leaders, along with his colleagues Daniel Webster and Henry Clay.

Early life edit

John Caldwell Calhoun was born in Abbeville District, South Carolina on March 18, 1782. He was the fourth child of Irish-born Patrick Calhoun and his wife Martha Caldwell. Patrick's father, also named Patrick, joined the waves of Scotch-Irish emigration from County Donegal to southwestern Pennsylvania. After the death of the elder Patrick in 1741, the family moved to Virginia. Following the British defeat at the Battle of the Monongahela in 1755, the family, fearing Indian attacks, moved to South Carolina in 1756.[5][6] Patrick, a prominent member of the tight-knit Scotch-Irish community on the frontier who worked as surveyor and farmer, was elected to the South Carolina Legislature in 1763 and acquired ownership over slave plantations. As a Presbyterian, he stood opposed to the established Anglican planter class based in Charleston. Patrick remained neutral in the American Revolution and opposed ratification of the U.S. Constitution on grounds of states' rights and personal liberties. Calhoun would eventually adopt his father's beliefs on states' rights.[7][8]

Young Calhoun showed scholastic talent, and although schools were scarce on the Carolina frontier, he was enrolled briefly in an academy taught by his brother-in-law Moses Waddel. It stressed the Latin and Greek classics. He continued his studies privately. When his father died, his brothers were away starting business careers, and so the 14-year-old Calhoun took over management of the family farm and five other farms. For four years he simultaneously kept up his reading and his hunting and fishing. The family decided he should continue his education, and so he resumed studies at Waddel's academy after it reopened.[9] With financing from his brothers, he went to Yale College in Connecticut in 1802. For the first time in his life, Calhoun encountered serious, advanced, and well-organized intellectual dialogue that could shape his mind. Yale was dominated by President Timothy Dwight, a Federalist who became his mentor. Dwight's brilliance entranced (and sometimes repelled) Calhoun.

Biographer John Niven says:

Calhoun admired Dwight's extemporaneous sermons, his seemingly encyclopedic knowledge, and his awesome mastery of the classics, of the tenets of Calvinism, and of metaphysics. No one, he thought, could explicate the language of John Locke with such clarity.[10]

Dwight repeatedly denounced Jeffersonian democracy, and Calhoun challenged him in class. Dwight could not shake Calhoun's commitment to republicanism. "Young man," retorted Dwight, "your talents are of a high order and might justify you for any station, but I deeply regret that you do not love sound principles better than sophistry—you seem to possess a most unfortunate bias for error."[11] Dwight also expounded on the strategy of secession from the Union as a legitimate solution for New England's disagreements with the national government.[12][13] Calhoun made friends easily, read widely, and was a noted member of the debating society of Brothers in Unity. He graduated as valedictorian in 1804. He studied law at the nation's first independent law school, Tapping Reeve Law School in Litchfield, Connecticut, where he worked with Tapping Reeve and James Gould. He was admitted to the South Carolina bar in 1807.[14]

Biographer Margaret Coit argues that:

every principle of secession or states' rights which Calhoun ever voiced can be traced right back to the thinking of intellectual New England ... Not the South, not slavery, but Yale College and Litchfield Law School made Calhoun a nullifier ... Dwight, Reeve, and Gould could not convince the young patriot from South Carolina as to the desirability of secession, but they left no doubts in his mind as to its legality.[15]

Personal life edit

 
Calhoun's wife, Floride Calhoun

In January 1811, Calhoun married Floride Bonneau Colhoun, a first cousin once removed.[16] She was the daughter of wealthy United States Senator and lawyer John E. Colhoun, a leader of Charleston high society.

The couple had ten children:

Calhoun was not openly religious and was generally not outspoken about his religious beliefs. He was raised as an orthodox Presbyterian, but was attracted to Southern varieties of Unitarianism like those that attracted Jefferson. Southern Unitarianism was generally less organized than the variety popular in New England. After his marriage, Calhoun and his wife attended the Episcopal Church, of which she was a member.[20][21][22] In 1821, he became a founding member of All Souls Unitarian Church in Washington, D.C.[23]

Historian Merrill D. Peterson describes Calhoun: "Intensely serious and severe, he could never write a love poem, though he often tried, because every line began with 'whereas' ..."[24]

House of Representatives edit

War of 1812 edit

With a base among the Irish and Scotch Irish, Calhoun won election to South Carolina's 6th congressional district of the House of Representatives in 1810. He immediately became a leader of the War Hawks, along with Speaker Henry Clay of Kentucky and South Carolina congressmen William Lowndes and Langdon Cheves. Brushing aside the vehement objections of both anti-war New Englanders and ardent Jeffersonians led by John Randolph of Roanoke, they demanded war against Britain, claiming that American honor and republican values had been violated by the British refusal to recognize American shipping rights.[9][25] As a member, and later acting chairman, of the Committee on Foreign Affairs, Calhoun played a major role in drafting two key documents in the push for war, the Report on Foreign Relations and the War Report of 1812. Drawing on the linguistic tradition of the Declaration of Independence, Calhoun's committee called for a declaration of war in ringing phrases, denouncing Britain's "lust for power", "unbounded tyranny", and "mad ambition".[26]

The United States declared war on Britain on June 18, inaugurating the War of 1812. The opening phase involved multiple disasters for American arms, as well as a financial crisis when the Treasury could barely pay the bills. The conflict caused economic hardship for Americans, as the Royal Navy blockaded the ports and cut off imports, exports, and the coastal trade. Several attempted invasions of Canada were fiascos, but the U.S. in 1813 seized control of Lake Erie and broke the power of hostile Indians in battles such as the Battle of the Thames in Canada in 1813 and the Battle of Horseshoe Bend in Alabama in 1814. These Indians had, in many cases, cooperated with the British or Spanish in opposing American interests.[27]

Calhoun labored to raise troops, provide funds, speed logistics, rescue the currency, and regulate commerce to aid the war effort. One colleague hailed him as "the young Hercules who carried the war on his shoulders".[9] Disasters on the battlefield made him double his legislative efforts to overcome the obstructionism of John Randolph, Daniel Webster, and other opponents of the war. By 1814 the British were thwarted at the invasions of New York and Baltimore, but Napoleon Bonaparte capitulated, meaning America would now face Britain's formidable reinforcement with units previously committed to Europe if the war were to continue. British and American diplomats signed the Treaty of Ghent undertaking a return to the borders of 1812 with no gains or losses. Before the treaty reached the Senate for ratification, and even before news of its signing reached New Orleans, a British invasion force was decisively defeated in January 1815 at the Battle of New Orleans, making a national hero of General Andrew Jackson. Americans celebrated what they called a "second war of independence" against Britain. This led to the beginning of the "Era of Good Feelings", an era marked by the formal demise of the Federalist Party and increased nationalism.[28]

Postwar planning edit

Despite American successes, the mismanagement of the Army during the war distressed Calhoun, and he resolved to strengthen and centralize the War Department.[29] The militia had proven itself quite unreliable during the war and Calhoun saw the need for a permanent and professional military force. In 1816 he called for building an effective navy, including steam frigates, as well as a standing army of adequate size. The British blockade of the coast had underscored the necessity of rapid means of internal transportation; Calhoun proposed a system of "great permanent roads". The blockade had cut off the import of manufactured items, so he emphasized the need to encourage more domestic manufacture, fully realizing that industry was based in the Northeast. The dependence of the old financial system on import duties was devastated when the blockade cut off imports. Calhoun called for a system of internal taxation that would not collapse from a war-time shrinkage of maritime trade, as the tariffs had done. The expiration of the charter of the First Bank of the United States had also distressed the Treasury, so to reinvigorate and modernize the economy Calhoun called for a new national bank. A new bank was chartered as the Second Bank of the United States by Congress and approved by President James Madison in 1816. Through his proposals, Calhoun emphasized a national footing and downplayed sectionalism and states rights. Historian Ulrich B. Phillips says that at this stage of Calhoun's career, "The word nation was often on his lips, and his conviction was to enhance national unity which he identified with national power"[30]

Rhetorical style edit

Regarding his career in the House of Representatives, an observer commented that Calhoun was "the most elegant speaker that sits in the House ... His gestures are easy and graceful, his manner forcible, and language elegant; but above all, he confines himself closely to the subject, which he always understands, and enlightens everyone within hearing."[31]

His talent for public speaking required systematic self-discipline and practice. A later critic noted the sharp contrast between his hesitant conversations and his fluent speaking styles, adding that Calhoun "had so carefully cultivated his naturally poor voice as to make his utterance clear, full, and distinct in speaking and while not at all musical it yet fell pleasantly on the ear".[32] Calhoun was "a high-strung man of ultra intellectual cast".[33] As such, Calhoun was not known for charisma. He was often seen as harsh and aggressive with other representatives.[34][35] But he was a brilliant intellectual orator and strong organizer. Historian Russell Kirk says, "That zeal which flared like Greek fire in Randolph burned in Calhoun, too; but it was contained in the Cast-iron Man as in a furnace, and Calhoun's passion glowed out only through his eyes. No man was more stately, more reserved."[36]

John Quincy Adams concluded in 1821 that "Calhoun is a man of fair and candid mind, of honorable principles, of clear and quick understanding, of cool self-possession, of enlarged philosophical views, and ardent patriotism. He is above all sectional and factious prejudices more than any other statesman of this Union with whom I have ever acted."[37] Historian Charles Wiltse noted Calhoun's evolution, "Though he is known today primarily for his sectionalism, Calhoun was the last of the great political leaders of his time to take a sectional position—later than Daniel Webster, later than Henry Clay, later than Adams himself."[38]

Secretary of War and postwar nationalism edit

 
Charles Bird King's 1822 portrait of Calhoun at the age of 40

In 1817, the deplorable state of the War Department led four men to decline offers from President James Monroe to accept the office of Secretary of War before Calhoun finally assumed the role. Calhoun took office on December 8 and served until 1825.[9] He continued his role as a leading nationalist during the Era of Good Feelings. He proposed an elaborate program of national reforms to the infrastructure that he believed would speed up economic modernization. His priority was an effective navy, including steam frigates, and in the second place a standing army of adequate size—and as further preparation for an emergency, "great permanent roads", "a certain encouragement" to manufacturers, and a system of internal taxation that would not collapse from a war-time shrinkage of maritime trade, like customs duties.[39]

A reform-minded modernizer, Calhoun attempted to institute centralization and efficiency in the Indian Department and in the Army by establishing new coastal and frontier fortifications and building military roads, but Congress either failed to respond to his reforms or responded with hostility. Calhoun's frustration with congressional inaction, political rivalries, and ideological differences spurred him to create the Bureau of Indian Affairs in 1824.[9][40] Thomas McKenney was appointed as its first head.

As secretary, Calhoun had responsibility for the management of Indian affairs. He promoted a plan, adopted by Monroe in 1825, to preserve the sovereignty of eastern Indians by relocating them to western reservations they could control without interference from state governments.[41] In over seven years Calhoun supervised the negotiation and ratification of 40 treaties with Indian tribes.[42] Calhoun opposed the invasion of Spanish Florida launched in 1818 by General Jackson during the First Seminole War, which was done without direct authorization from Calhoun or President Monroe, and in private with other cabinet members, advocated censuring of Jackson as punishment. Calhoun claimed that Jackson had begun a war against Spain in violation of the Constitution and, that he had contradicted Calhoun's explicit orders in doing so. Specific official instructions not to invade Florida or attack the Spanish were not issued by the administration.[43] However, Calhoun supported the execution of Alexander Arbuthnot and Robert Ambrister, two British soldiers living in Florida who were accused of inciting the Seminole to make war against the United States. Calhoun accused the British of being involved in "wickedness, corruption, and barbarity at which the heart sickens and which in this enlightened age it ought not scarcely to be believed that a Christian nation would have participated". He added that he hoped the executions of Arbuthnot and Ambrister would deter the British and any other nations "who by false promises delude and excite an Indian tribe to all the deeds of savage war".[44] The United States annexed Florida from Spain in 1819 through the Adams–Onís Treaty.[9]

Calhoun's tenure as Secretary of War witnessed the outbreak of the Missouri crisis in December 1818, when a petition arrived from Missouri settlers seeking admission into the Union as a slave state. In response, Representative James Tallmadge Jr. of New York proposed two amendments to the bill designed to restrict the spread of slavery into what would become the new state. These amendments touched off an intense debate between North and South that had some talking openly of disunion. In February 1820, Calhoun predicted to Secretary of State John Quincy Adams, a New Englander, that the Missouri issue "would not produce a dissolution" of the Union. "But if it should," Calhoun went on, "the South would of necessity be compelled to form an alliance with...Great Britain." "I said that would be returning to the colonial state," Adams recalled saying afterward. According to Adams, "He said, yes, pretty much, but it would be forced upon them."[45]

After the war ended in 1815 the "Old Republicans" in Congress, with their Jeffersonian ideology for an economy in the federal government, sought to reduce the operations and finances of the War Department. Calhoun's political rivalry with William H. Crawford, the Secretary of the Treasury, over the pursuit of the presidency in the 1824 election, complicated Calhoun's tenure as War Secretary. The general lack of military action following the war meant that a large army, such as that preferred by Calhoun, was no longer considered necessary. The "Radicals", a group of strong states' rights supporters who mostly favored Crawford for president in the coming election, were inherently suspicious of large armies. Some allegedly also wanted to hinder Calhoun's presidential aspirations for that election.[9] Thus, on March 2, 1821, Congress passed the Reduction Act, which reduced the number of enlisted men of the army by half, from 11,709 to 5,586, and the number of the officer corps by a fifth, from 680 to 540. Calhoun, though concerned, offered little protest. Later, to provide the army with a more organized command structure, which had been severely lacking during the War of 1812, he appointed Major General Jacob Brown to a position that would later become known as "Commanding General of the United States Army".[46]

Vice presidency (1825–1832) edit

1824 and 1828 elections and Adams presidency edit

 
State historic marker at Fort Hill, Calhoun's home from 1825 until his death in 1850

Calhoun was initially a candidate for President of the United States in the election of 1824. Four other men also sought the presidency: Andrew Jackson, Adams, Crawford, and Henry Clay. Calhoun failed to win the endorsement of the South Carolina legislature, and his supporters in Pennsylvania decided to abandon his candidacy in favor of Jackson's, and instead supported him for vice president. Other states soon followed, and Calhoun therefore allowed himself to become a candidate for vice president rather than president.[9][47] The Electoral College elected Calhoun vice president by a landslide on December 1, 1824. He won 182 of 261 electoral votes, while five other men received the remaining votes.[48] No presidential candidate received a majority in the Electoral College, and the election was ultimately resolved by the House of Representatives, where Adams was declared the winner over Crawford and Jackson, who in the election had led Adams in both popular vote and electoral vote. After Clay, the Speaker of the House, was appointed Secretary of State by Adams, Jackson's supporters denounced what they considered a "corrupt bargain" between Adams and Clay to give Adams the presidency in exchange for Clay receiving the office of Secretary of State, the holder of which had traditionally become the next president. Calhoun also expressed some concerns, which caused friction between him and Adams.[49]

Calhoun also opposed President Adams' plan to send a delegation to observe a meeting of South and Central American leaders in Panama, believing that the United States should stay out of foreign affairs. Calhoun became disillusioned with Adams' high tariff policies and increased centralization of government through a network of "internal improvements", which he now saw as a threat to the rights of the states. Calhoun wrote to Jackson on June 4, 1826, informing him that he would support Jackson's second campaign for the presidency in 1828. The two were never particularly close friends. Calhoun never fully trusted Jackson, a frontiersman and popular war hero, but hoped that his election would bring some reprieve from Adams's anti-states' rights policies.[9] Jackson selected Calhoun as his running mate, and together they defeated Adams and his running mate Richard Rush.[50] Calhoun thus became the second of two vice presidents to serve under two different presidents. The only other man who accomplished this feat was George Clinton, who served as vice president from 1805 to 1812 under Thomas Jefferson and James Madison.[51]

During the election, Jackson's aide James Alexander Hamilton attempted a rapprochement between Jackson and Crawford, whom Jackson resented owing partially to the belief that it was he, not Calhoun, who had opposed the invasion of Florida. Hamilton spoke about this prospect with Governor John Forsyth of Georgia, who acted as a mediator between the Jackson campaign and Crawford. Forsyth wrote a letter back to Hamilton in which he claimed that Crawford had stated to him that it was Calhoun, not Crawford, who had supported censuring Jackson for his invasion of Florida. Knowing that the letter could destroy the partnership between Jackson and Calhoun, Hamilton and fellow Jackson aide William B. Lewis allowed it to remain in Hamilton's possession without informing Jackson or the public of its existence.[52]

Petticoat affair edit

Early in Jackson's administration, Calhoun's wife Floride Bonneau Calhoun organized Cabinet wives (hence the term "petticoats") against Peggy Eaton, wife of Secretary of War John Eaton, and refused to associate with her. They alleged that John and Peggy Eaton had engaged in an adulterous affair while she was still legally married to her first husband, and that her recent behavior was unladylike. The allegations of scandal created an intolerable situation for Jackson. The Petticoat affair ended friendly relations between Calhoun and Jackson.[53]

Jackson sided with the Eatons. He and his late wife Rachel Donelson had undergone similar political attacks stemming from their marriage in 1791. The two had married in 1791 not knowing that Rachel's first husband, Lewis Robards, had failed to finalize the expected divorce. Once the divorce was finalized, they married legally in 1794, but the episode caused a major controversy, and was used against him in the 1828 campaign. Jackson saw attacks on Eaton stemming ultimately from the political opposition of Calhoun, who had failed to silence his wife's criticisms. The Calhouns were widely regarded as the chief instigators.[18][54] Jackson, who loved to personalize disputes,[55] also saw the Petticoat affair as a direct challenge to his authority, because it involved lower-ranking executive officials and their wives seeming to contest his ability to choose whomever he wanted for his cabinet.[56] Secretary of State Martin Van Buren, a widower, took Jackson's side and defended the Eatons.[57] Van Buren was a northerner and a supporter of the 1828 tariff (which Calhoun bitterly opposed). Calhoun and Van Buren were the main contenders for the vice-presidential nomination in the ensuing election, and the nominee would then presumably be the party's choice to succeed Jackson.[58] That Van Buren sided with the Eatons, in addition to disagreements between Jackson and Calhoun on other issues, mainly the Nullification Crisis, marked him as Calhoun's likely vice presidential successor.[59]

Some historians, including Jackson biographers Richard B. Latner and Robert V. Remini, believe that the hostility towards the Eatons was rooted less in questions of proper behavior than in politics. Eaton had been in favor of the Tariff of Abominations. He was also politically close to Van Buren. Calhoun may have wanted to expel Eaton from the cabinet as a way of boosting his anti-tariff agenda and increasing his standing in the Democratic Party. Many cabinet members were Southern and could be expected to sympathize with such concerns, especially Treasury Secretary Samuel D. Ingham, who was allied with Calhoun and believed that he, not Van Buren, should succeed Jackson as president.[58]

In 1830, reports had emerged accurately stating that Calhoun, as Secretary of War, had favored censuring Jackson for his 1818 invasion of Florida. These infuriated Jackson.[60] Eventually, Lewis decided to reveal the existence of Forsyth's letter, and on April 30, Crawford wrote a second letter, this time to Forsyth, repeating the charge Forsyth represented him as having previously made. Jackson received the letter on May 12, which confirmed his suspicions. He claimed that Calhoun had "betrayed" him.[61] Eaton took his revenge on Calhoun. For reasons unclear, Calhoun asked Eaton to approach Jackson about the possibility of Calhoun publishing his correspondence with Jackson at the time of the Seminole War. Eaton did nothing, leading Calhoun to believe that Jackson had approved the publication of the letters.[62] Calhoun published them in the United States Telegraph, a newspaper edited by a Calhoun protégé, Duff Green.[9] This gave the appearance of Calhoun trying to justify himself against a conspiracy to damage him and further enraged the President.[62]

Finally in the spring of 1831, at the suggestion of Van Buren, who, like Jackson, supported the Eatons, Jackson replaced all but one of his Cabinet members, thereby limiting Calhoun's influence. Van Buren began the process by resigning as Secretary of State, facilitating Jackson's removal of others. Van Buren thereby grew in favor with Jackson, while the rift between the President and Calhoun was widened.[63] Later, in 1832, Calhoun, as vice president, cast a tie-breaking vote against Jackson's nomination of Van Buren as Minister to Great Britain in a failed attempt to end Van Buren's political career. Missouri Senator Thomas Hart Benton, a staunch supporter of Jackson, then stated that Calhoun had "elected a Vice President", as Van Buren was able to move past his failed nomination as Minister to Great Britain and instead gain the Democratic Party's vice-presidential nomination in the 1832 election, in which he and Jackson were victorious.[9]

Nullification edit

Calhoun had begun to oppose increases in protective tariffs, as they generally benefited Northerners more than Southerners. While he was vice president in the Adams administration, Jackson's supporters devised a high tariff legislation that placed duties on imports that were also made in New England. Calhoun had been assured that the northeastern interests would reject the Tariff of 1828, exposing pro-Adams New England congressmen to charges that they selfishly opposed legislation popular among Jacksonian Democrats in the west and mid-Atlantic States. The Southern legislators miscalculated and the so-called "Tariff of Abominations" passed and was signed into law by President Adams. Frustrated, Calhoun returned to his South Carolina plantation, where he anonymously composed South Carolina Exposition and Protest, an essay rejecting the centralization philosophy and supporting the principle of nullification as a means to prevent a tyranny of a central government.[64]

Calhoun supported the idea of nullification through a concurrent majority. Nullification is a legal theory that a state has the right to nullify, or invalidate, any federal law it deems unconstitutional. In Calhoun's words, it is "the right of a State to interpose, in the last resort, in order to arrest an unconstitutional act of the General Government, within its limits".[65] Nullification can be traced back to arguments by Jefferson and Madison in writing the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions of 1798 against the Alien and Sedition Acts. Madison expressed the hope that the states would declare the acts unconstitutional, while Jefferson explicitly endorsed nullification.[66] Calhoun openly argued for a state's right to secede from the Union, as a last resort to protect its liberty and sovereignty. In his later years, Madison rebuked supporters of nullification, stating that no state had the right to nullify federal law.[67]

In "South Carolina Exposition and Protest", Calhoun argued that a state could veto any federal law that went beyond the enumerated powers and encroached upon the residual powers of the State.[68] President Jackson, meanwhile, generally supported states' rights, but opposed nullification and secession. At the 1830 Jefferson Day dinner at Jesse Brown's Indian Queen Hotel, Jackson proposed a toast and proclaimed, "Our federal Union, it must be preserved."[69] Calhoun replied, "The Union, next to our liberty, the most dear. May we all remember that it can only be preserved by respecting the rights of the states, and distributing equally the benefit and burden of the Union."[70] Calhoun's publication of letters from the Seminole War in the Telegraph caused his relationship with Jackson to deteriorate further, thus contributing to the nullification crisis. Jackson and Calhoun began an angry correspondence that lasted until Jackson stopped it in July.[9]

Jackson supported a revision to tariff rates known as the Tariff of 1832. It was designed to placate the nullifiers by lowering tariff rates. Written by Treasury Secretary Louis McLane, the bill lowered duties from 45% to 27%. In May, Representative John Quincy Adams introduced a slightly revised version of the bill, which Jackson accepted. It passed Congress on July 9 and was signed by the president on July 14. The bill failed to satisfy extremists on either side.[71] In October, the South Carolina legislature voted to call a convention to nullify the tariffs.[72] On November 24, the South Carolina Nullification Convention passed an ordinance nullifying both the Tariff of 1832 and the Tariff of 1828 and threatening to secede if the federal government attempted to enforce the tariffs.[73][74] In response, Jackson sent U.S. Navy warships to Charleston harbor, and threatened to hang Calhoun or any man who worked to support nullification or secession.[75] After joining the Senate, Calhoun began to work with Clay on a new compromise tariff. A bill sponsored by the administration had been introduced by Representative Gulian C. Verplanck of New York, but it lowered rates more sharply than Clay and other protectionists desired. Clay managed to get Calhoun to agree to a bill with higher rates in exchange for Clay's opposition to Jackson's military threats and, perhaps, with the hope that he could win some Southern votes in his next bid for the presidency.[76] On the same day, Congress passed the Force Bill, which empowered the President of the United States to use military force to ensure state compliance with federal law. South Carolina accepted the tariff, but in a final show of defiance, nullified the Force Bill.[77] In Calhoun's speech against the Force Bill, delivered on February 5, 1833, no longer as vice president, he strongly endorsed nullification, at one point saying:

Why, then, confer on the President the extensive and unlimited powers provided in this bill? Why authorize him to use military force to arrest the civil process of the State? But one answer can be given: That, in a contest between the State and the General Government, if the resistance be limited on both sides to the civil process, the State, by its inherent sovereignty, standing upon its reserved powers, will prove too powerful in such a controversy, and must triumph over the Federal Government, sustained by its delegated and limited authority; and in this answer we have an acknowledgment of the truth of those great principles for which the State has so firmly and nobly contended.[78]

In his three-volume biography of Jackson, James Parton summed up Calhoun's role in the Nullification crisis: "Calhoun began it. Calhoun continued it. Calhoun stopped it."[79]

Resignation edit

As tensions over nullification escalated, South Carolina Senator Robert Y. Hayne was considered less capable than Calhoun to represent South Carolina in the Senate debates, so in late 1832 Hayne resigned to become governor; Calhoun resigned as vice president, and the South Carolina legislature elected Calhoun to fill Hayne's Senate seat. Van Buren had already been elected as Jackson's new vice president, meaning that Calhoun had less than three months left on his term anyway.[80] The South Carolina newspaper City Gazette commented on the change:

It is admitted that the former gentleman [Hayne] is injudiciously pitted against Clay and Webster and, nullification out of the question, Mr. Calhoun's place should be in front with these formidable politicians.[81]

Biographer John Niven argues "that these moves were part of a well-thought-out plan whereby Hayne would restrain the hotheads in the state legislature and Calhoun would defend his brainchild, nullification, in Washington against administration stalwarts and the likes of Daniel Webster, the new apostle of northern nationalism."[82] As vice president, Calhoun made a record of 31 tie-breaking votes in the Senate, the most of any vice president in their capacity as Senate president until vice president Kamala Harris surpassed it in 2023.[83][84]

First term in the U.S. Senate edit

 
A portrait of Calhoun from 1834 by Rembrandt Peale

When Calhoun took his seat in the Senate on December 29, 1832, his chances of becoming president were considered poor due to his involvement in the Nullification Crisis, which left him without connections to a major national party.[9] After the implementation of the Compromise Tariff of 1833, which helped solve the Nullification Crisis, the Nullifier Party, along with other anti-Jackson politicians, formed a coalition known as the Whig Party. Calhoun sometimes affiliated with the Whigs, but chose to remain a virtual independent due to the Whig promotion of federally subsidized "internal improvements".[85]

From 1833 to 1834, Jackson was engaged in removing federal funds from the Second Bank of the United States during the Bank War. Calhoun opposed this action, considering it a dangerous expansion of executive power.[86] He called the men of the Jackson administration "artful, cunning, and corrupt politicians, and not fearless warriors".[87] He accused Jackson of being ignorant about financial matters. As evidence, he cited the economic panic caused by Nicholas Biddle as a means to stop Jackson from destroying the Bank.[87] On March 28, 1834, Calhoun voted with the Whig senators on a successful motion to censure Jackson for his removal of the funds.[88] In 1837, he refused to attend the inauguration of Jackson's chosen successor, Van Buren, even as other powerful senators who opposed the administration, such as Webster and Clay, did witness the inauguration.[89] However, by 1837, Calhoun generally had realigned himself with most of the Democrats' policies.[85]

To restore his national stature, Calhoun cooperated with Van Buren. Democrats were hostile to national banks, and the country's bankers had joined the Whig Party. The Democratic replacement, meant to help combat the Panic of 1837, was the Independent Treasury system, which Calhoun supported and which went into effect.[90] Calhoun, like Jackson and Van Buren, attacked finance capitalism and opposed what he saw as encroachment by government and big business. For this reason, he opposed the candidacy of Whig William Henry Harrison in the 1840 presidential election, believing that Harrison would institute high tariffs and therefore place an undue burden on the Southern economy.[9] Calhoun resigned from the Senate on March 3, 1843, four years before the expiration of his term, and returned to Fort Hill to prepare an attempt to win the Democratic nomination for the 1844 presidential election.[91] He gained little support, even from the South, and quit.[92]

Secretary of State edit

Appointment and the Annexation of Texas edit

When Harrison died in 1841 after a month in office, Vice President John Tyler succeeded him. Tyler, a former Democrat, was expelled from the Whig Party after vetoing bills passed by the Whig congressional majority to reestablish a national bank and raise tariffs.[93] He named Calhoun Secretary of State on April 10, 1844, following the death of Abel P. Upshur, one of six people killed when a cannon exploded during a public demonstration in the USS Princeton disaster.

 
Calhoun, during his tenure as Secretary of State (April 1844 – March 1845)

Upshur's loss was a severe blow to the Tyler administration. When Calhoun was nominated as Upshur's replacement, the White House was well-advanced towards securing a treaty of annexation with Texas. The State Department's secret negotiations with the Texas republic had proceeded despite explicit threats from a suspicious Mexican government that an unauthorized seizure of its northern district of Coahuila y Tejas would be equivalent to an act of war.[94] Both the negotiations with Texas envoys and the garnering of support from the U.S. Senate had been spearheaded aggressively by Secretary Upshur, a strong pro-slavery partisan.[95] Tyler looked to its ratification by the Senate as the sine qua non to his ambition for another term in office. Tyler planned to outflank the Whigs by gaining support from the Democratic Party or possibly creating a new party of discontented Northern Democrats and Southern Whigs.[96]

Calhoun, though as avid a proponent for Texas acquisition as Upshur, posed a political liability to Tyler's aims.[97] As secretary of state, Calhoun's political objective was to see that the presidency was placed in the hands of a southern extremist, who would put the expansion of slavery at the center of national policy.[98]

Tyler and his allies had, since 1843, devised and encouraged national propaganda promoting Texas annexation, which understated Southern slaveholders' aspirations regarding the future of Texas.[95] Instead, Tyler chose to portray the annexation of Texas as something that would prove economically beneficial to the nation as a whole. The further introduction of slavery into the vast expanses of Texas and beyond, they argued, would "diffuse" rather than concentrate slavery regionally, ultimately weakening white attachment and dependence on slave labor. This theory was yoked to the growing enthusiasm among Americans for Manifest Destiny, a desire to see the social, economic and moral precepts of republicanism spread across the continent.[99][100] Moreover, Tyler declared that national security was at stake: If foreign powers—Great Britain in particular—were to gain influence in Texas, it would be reduced to a British cotton-producing reserve and a base to exert geostrategic influence over North America. Texas might be coerced into relinquishing slavery, inducing slave uprisings in adjoining slave states and deepening sectional conflicts between American free-soil and slave-soil interests.[101] The appointment of Calhoun, with his southern states' rights reputation—which some believed was "synonymous with slavery"—threatened to cast doubt on Tyler's carefully crafted reputation as a nationalist.[102] Tyler, though ambivalent, felt obliged to enlist Calhoun as Secretary of State, because Tyler's closest confidantes had, in haste, offered the position to the South Carolinian statesman in the immediate aftermath of the Princeton disaster. Calhoun would be confirmed by Congress by unanimous vote.[103]

In advance of Calhoun's arrival in Washington, D.C., Tyler attempted to quickly finalize the treaty negotiations. Sam Houston, President of the Texas Republic, fearing Mexican retaliation, insisted on a tangible demonstration of U.S. commitments to the security of Texas. When key Texas diplomats failed to appear on schedule, the delay compelled Tyler to bring his new Secretary of State directly into negotiations.[102] Secretary Calhoun was directed to honor former Secretary Upshur's verbal assurances of protection[104] now offered by Calhoun in writing, to provide for U.S. military intervention in the event that Mexico used force to hold Texas. Tyler deployed U.S. Navy vessels to the Gulf of Mexico and ordered army units mobilized, entirely paid for with $100,000 of executive branch contingency funds. The move side-stepped constitutional requirements that Congress authorize appropriations for war.[102]

On April 22, 1844, Secretary Calhoun signed the treaty of annexation and ten days later delivered it to the Senate for consideration in secret session.[105] The details of the treaty negotiations and supporting documents were leaked to the press by Senator Benjamin Tappan of Ohio. Tappan, a Democrat, was an opponent of annexation and of slavery.[106] The terms of the Tyler–Texas treaty and the release of Calhoun's letter to British ambassador Richard Pakenham exposed the annexation campaign as a program to expand and preserve slavery. In the Pakenham letter, Calhoun alleged that the institution of slavery contributed to the physical and mental well-being of Southern slaves. The U.S. Senate was compelled to open its debates on ratification to public scrutiny, and hopes for its passage by the two-thirds majority required by the Constitution were abandoned by administration supporters. In linking Texas annexation to the expansion of slavery, Calhoun had alienated many who might previously have supported the treaty.[107]

On June 8, 1844, after fierce partisan struggles, the Senate rejected the Tyler–Texas treaty by a vote of 16–35, a margin of more than two-to-one.[106] The vote went largely along party lines: Whigs had opposed it almost unanimously (1–27), while Democrats split, but voted largely in favor (15–8).[108] Nevertheless, the disclosure of the treaty placed the issue of Texas annexation at the center of the 1844 general election.[109][110]

Election of 1844 edit

 
Daguerreotype of Calhoun, c. 1843

At the Democratic Convention in Baltimore, Maryland in May 1844, Calhoun's supporters, with Calhoun in attendance, threatened to bolt the proceedings and shift support to Tyler's third party ticket if the delegates failed to produce a pro-Texas nominee.[111] Calhoun's Pakenham letter, and its identification with proslavery extremism, moved the presumptive Democratic Party nominee, the northerner Martin Van Buren, into denouncing annexation. Therefore, Van Buren, already not widely popular in the South, saw his support from that region crippled. As a result, James K. Polk, a pro-Texas Jacksonian and Tennessee politician, won the nomination. Historian Daniel Walker Howe says that Calhoun's Pakenham letter was a deliberate attempt to influence the outcome of the 1844 election, writing:

By identifying Texas with slavery, Calhoun made sure that Van Buren, being a northerner, would have to oppose Texas. This, Calhoun correctly foresaw, would hurt the New Yorker's chances for the Democratic nomination. Nor did the Carolinian's ingenious strategy ultimately wreck the cause for Texas annexation. Indeed, in that respect it would turn out a brilliant success.[112]

In the general election, Calhoun offered his endorsement to Polk on condition that he support the annexation of Texas, oppose the Tariff of 1842, and dissolve the Washington Globe, the semi-official propaganda organ of the Democratic Party headed by Francis Preston Blair. He received these assurances and enthusiastically supported Polk's candidacy.[113] Polk narrowly defeated Henry Clay, who opposed annexation.[114] Lame-duck President Tyler organized a joint House–Senate vote on the Texas treaty which passed, requiring only a simple majority. He signed a bill of annexation on March 1, With President Polk's support, the Texas annexation treaty was approved by the Texas Republic in 1845.[115] A bill to admit Texas as the 28th state of the Union was signed by Polk on December 29, 1845.[116]

Second term in the Senate edit

Mexican–American War and Wilmot Proviso edit

 
Calhoun photographed by Mathew Brady in 1849, shortly before his death

Calhoun was re-elected to the Senate in 1845 following the resignation of Daniel Elliott Huger. He soon became vocally opposed to the Mexican–American War. He believed that it would distort the national character by undermining republicanism in favor of empire and by bringing non-white persons into the country.[9] When Congress declared war against Mexico on May 13, he abstained from voting on the measure.[117] In South Carolina, Calhoun received some praise for his principled position, but support for the war was high in spite of his opposition.[118] Calhoun also vigorously opposed the Wilmot Proviso, an 1846 proposal by Pennsylvania Representative David Wilmot to ban slavery in all newly acquired territories.[119] The House of Representatives, through its Northern majority, passed the provision. However, the Senate never approved the measure.[119][120]

Oregon boundary dispute edit

A major crisis emerged from the persistent Oregon boundary dispute between Great Britain and the United States, due to an increasing number of American migrants. The territory included most of present-day British Columbia, Washington, Oregon, and Idaho. American expansionists used the slogan "54–40 or fight" in reference to the Northern boundary coordinates of the Oregon territory. The parties compromised, ending the war threat, by splitting the area down the middle at the 49th parallel, with the British acquiring British Columbia and the Americans accepting Washington and Oregon. Calhoun, along with President Polk and Secretary of State James Buchanan, continued work on the treaty while he was a senator, and it was ratified by a vote of 41–14 on June 18, 1846.[121]

Rejection of the Compromise of 1850 edit

The Compromise of 1850, devised by Clay and Stephen A. Douglas, a first-term Democratic senator from Illinois, was designed to solve the controversy over the status of slavery in the vast new territories acquired from Mexico. Many pro-slavery Southerners opposed it as inadequate protection for slavery, and Calhoun helped organize the Nashville Convention, which would meet in June to discuss possible Southern secession. The 67-year-old Calhoun had suffered periodic bouts of tuberculosis throughout his life. In March 1850, the disease reached a critical stage. Weeks from death and too feeble to speak, Calhoun wrote a blistering attack on the Compromise that would become his most famous speech. On March 4 a friend and disciple, Senator James Mason of Virginia, read his remarks.[122][123] Calhoun affirmed the right of the South to leave the Union in response to what he called Northern subjugation, specifically the North's growing opposition to the South's "peculiar institution" of slavery. He warned that the day "the balance between the two sections" was destroyed would be a day not far removed from disunion, anarchy, and civil war. Calhoun queried how the Union might be preserved in light of subjugation of the "weaker" party—the pro-slavery South—by the "stronger" party, the anti-slavery North. He maintained that the responsibility of solving the question lay entirely on the North—as the stronger section, to allow the Southern minority an equal share in governance and to cease its anti-slavery agitation. He added:

If you who represent the stronger portion, cannot agree to settle them on the broad principle of justice and duty, say so; and let the States we both represent agree to separate and part in peace. If you are unwilling we should part in peace, tell us so; and we shall know what to do, when you reduce the question to submission or resistance.[91]

Calhoun died soon afterward, and although the Compromise measures did eventually pass, Calhoun's ideas about states' rights attracted increasing attention across the South. Historian William Barney argues that Calhoun's ideas proved "appealing to Southerners concerned with preserving slavery. ...Southern radicals known as 'Fire-Eaters' pushed the doctrine of states' rights to its logical extreme by upholding the constitutional right of the state to secede".[124]

Death and burial edit

 
Calhoun's grave at St. Philip's Church yard in Charleston

Calhoun died at the Old Brick Capitol boarding house in Washington, D.C., on March 31, 1850, of tuberculosis, at the age of 68. The last words attributed to him were "The South, the poor South!"[125]

He was interred at St. Philip's Churchyard in Charleston, South Carolina. During the Civil War, a group of Calhoun's friends were concerned about the possible desecration of his grave by Federal troops and, during the night, removed his coffin to a hiding place under the stairs of the church. The next night, his coffin was buried in an unmarked grave near the church, where it remained until 1871 when it was again exhumed and returned to its original place.[126]

After Calhoun had died, an associate suggested that Senator Thomas Hart Benton give a eulogy in honor of Calhoun on the floor of the Senate. Benton, a devoted Unionist, declined, saying: "He is not dead, sir—he is not dead. There may be no vitality in his body, but there is in his doctrines."[127]

The Clemson University campus in South Carolina occupies the site of Calhoun's Fort Hill plantation, which he bequeathed to his wife and daughter. They sold it and its 50 slaves to a relative. When that owner died, Thomas Green Clemson foreclosed the mortgage. He later bequeathed the property to the state for use as an agricultural college to be named after him.[128]

Calhoun's widow, Floride, died on July 25, 1866, and was buried in St. Paul's Episcopal Church Cemetery in Pendleton, South Carolina, near their children, but apart from her husband.[18]

Political philosophy edit

Agrarian republicanism edit

Historian Lee H. Cheek, Jr. characterizes Calhoun's American republicanism as within the South Atlantic tradition, as opposed to the puritan tradition. While the New England–based puritan tradition stressed a politically centralized enforcement of moral and religious norms to secure civic virtue, the South Atlantic tradition relied on a decentralized moral and religious order based on the idea of subsidiarity (or localism). Cheek considers the 1798 Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions, written by Jefferson and Madison, the cornerstone of Calhoun's republicanism. Calhoun believed that popular rule is best expressed in local communities that are nearly autonomous while serving as units of a larger society.[129]

Slavery edit

 
George Peter Alexander Healy's 1851 painting of Calhoun at City Hall in Charleston, South Carolina

Calhoun led the pro-slavery faction in the Senate, opposing both total abolitionism and attempts such as the Wilmot Proviso to limit the expansion of slavery into the western territories.[9]

Calhoun's father, Patrick Calhoun, was a staunch supporter of slavery who taught his son that social standing depended not merely on a commitment to the ideal of popular self-government, but also on the ownership of a substantial number of slaves. Flourishing in a world in which slaveholding was a hallmark of civilization, Calhoun saw little reason to question its morality as an adult.[130] He believed that slavery instilled in white people a code of honor that fostered civic-mindedness. From Calhoun's standpoint, the expansion of slavery decreased the likelihood for social conflict and postponed the decay of when money would become the only measure of self-worth, as he believed had happened in New England. Calhoun was firmly convinced that slavery was the key to the success of the American dream.[131]

Whereas other Southern politicians had excused slavery as a "necessary evil", in a famous speech on the Senate floor on February 6, 1837, Calhoun asserted that slavery was a "positive good".[4] He rooted this claim on three grounds: white supremacy, paternalism and capitalism. All societies, Calhoun claimed, are ruled by an elite group that enjoys the fruits of the labor of a less-exceptional group. Senator William Cabell Rives of Virginia had earlier referred to slavery as an evil that might become a "lesser evil" in some circumstances. Calhoun believed that conceded too much to the abolitionists:[132]

I take higher ground. I hold that in the present state of civilization, where two races of different origin, and distinguished by color, and other physical differences, as well as intellectual, are brought together, the relation now existing in the slaveholding States between the two, is, instead of an evil, a good—a positive good ... I may say with truth, that in few countries so much is left to the share of the laborer, and so little exacted from him, or where there is more kind attention paid to him in sickness or infirmities of age. Compare his condition with the tenants of the poor houses in the more civilized portions of Europe—look at the sick, and the old and infirm slave, on one hand, in the midst of his family and friends, under the kind superintending care of his master and mistress, and compare it with the forlorn and wretched condition of the pauper in the poorhouse ... I hold then, that there never has yet existed a wealthy and civilized society in which one portion of the community did not, in point of fact, live on the labor of the other.[133]

Calhoun's treatment of his own slaves includes an incident in 1831, when his slave Alick ran away when threatened with a severe whipping. Calhoun wrote to his second cousin and brother-in-law, asking him to keep a lookout for Alick, and if he was taken, to have him "severely whipped" and sent back.[134] In a letter to Alick's captor, Calhoun wrote:

I am glad to hear that Alick has been apprehended and am much obliged to you for paying the expense of apprehending him . . . . He ran away for no other cause, but to avoid a correction for some misconduct, and as I am desirous to prevent a repetition, I wish you to have him lodged in Jail for one week, to be fed on bread and water and to employ some one for me to give him 30 lashes well laid on, at the end of the time.[135]

Calhoun rejected the belief of Southern leaders, such as Henry Clay, that all Americans could agree on the "opinion and feeling" that slavery was wrong, although they might disagree on the most practicable way to respond to that great wrong. Calhoun's constitutional ideas acted as a viable conservative alternative to Northern appeals to democracy, majority rule, and natural rights.[136]

As well as providing an intellectual justification of slavery, Calhoun played a central role in devising the South's overall political strategy. According to historian Ulrich B. Phillips,

[Calhoun's] devices were manifold: to suppress agitation, to praise the slaveholding system; to promote white Southern prosperity and expansion; to procure a Western alliance; to frame a fresh plan of government by concurrent majorities; to form a Southern bloc; to warn the North of the dangers of Southern desperation; to appeal for Northern magnanimity as indispensable for the saving of the Union.[137]

Shortly after delivering his speech against the Compromise of 1850, Calhoun predicted the destruction of the Union over the slavery issue. Speaking to Senator Mason, he said:

I fix its probable occurrence within twelve years or three presidential terms. You and others of your age will probably live to see it; I shall not. The mode by which it will be done is not so clear; it may be brought about in a manner that no one now foresees. But the probability is, it will explode in a presidential election.[138]

Opposition to the War with Mexico edit

 
Calhoun's home, Fort Hill, on the grounds that became part of Clemson University, in Clemson, South Carolina

Calhoun was consistently opposed to the War with Mexico, arguing that an enlarged military effort would only feed the alarming and growing lust of the public for empire regardless of its constitutional dangers, bloat executive powers and patronage, and saddle the republic with a soaring debt that would disrupt finances and encourage speculation. Calhoun feared, moreover, that Southern slave owners would be shut out of any conquered Mexican territories, as nearly happened with the Wilmot Proviso. He argued that the war would detrimentally lead to the annexation of all of Mexico, which would bring Mexicans into the country, whom he considered deficient in moral and intellectual terms. He said, in a speech on January 4, 1848:

We make a great mistake, sir, when we suppose that all people are capable of self-government. We are anxious to force free government on all; and I see that it has been urged in a very respectable quarter, that it is the mission of this country to spread civil and religious liberty over all the world, and especially over this continent. It is a great mistake. None but people advanced to a very high state of moral and intellectual improvement are capable, in a civilized state, of maintaining free government; and amongst those who are so purified, very few, indeed, have had the good fortune of forming a constitution capable of endurance.[139]

Calhoun argued that a war for territory was morally wrong and felt that the Polk administration had been too aggressive in trying to force a war.[140] Anti-slavery Northerners denounced the war as a Southern conspiracy to expand slavery; Calhoun in turn perceived a connivance of Yankees to destroy the South. By 1847 he decided the Union was threatened by a totally corrupt party system. He believed that in their lust for office, patronage and spoils, politicians in the North pandered to the anti-slavery vote, especially during presidential campaigns, and politicians in the slave states sacrificed Southern rights in an effort to placate the Northern wings of their parties. Thus, the essential first step in any successful assertion of Southern rights had to be the jettisoning of all party ties. In 1848–49, Calhoun tried to give substance to his call for Southern unity. He was the driving force behind the drafting and publication of the "Address of the Southern Delegates in Congress, to Their Constituents".[141] It alleged Northern violations of the constitutional rights of the South, then warned Southern voters to expect forced emancipation of slaves in the near future, followed by their complete subjugation by an unholy alliance of unprincipled Northerners and blacks. Whites would flee and the South would "become the permanent abode of disorder, anarchy, poverty, misery, and wretchedness".[142] Only the immediate and unflinching unity of Southern whites could prevent such a disaster. Such unity would either bring the North to its senses or lay the foundation for an independent South. But the spirit of union was still strong in the region and fewer than 40% of the Southern congressmen signed the address, and only one Whig.[143]

Many Southerners believed his warnings and read every political news story from the North as further evidence of the planned destruction of the white southern way of life. The climax came a decade after Calhoun's death with the election of Republican Abraham Lincoln in 1860, which led to the secession of South Carolina, followed by six other Southern states. They formed the new Confederate States, which, in accordance with Calhoun's theory, did not have any organized political parties.[144]

Concurrent majority edit

 
Undated photograph of Calhoun

Calhoun's basic concern for protecting the diversity of minority interests is expressed in his chief contribution to political science—the idea of a concurrent majority across different groups as distinguished from a numerical majority.[145] A concurrent majority is a system in which a minority group is permitted to exercise a sort of veto power over actions of a majority that are believed to infringe upon the minority's rights.[146]

According to the principle of a numerical majority, the will of the more numerous citizens should always rule, regardless of the burdens on the minority. Such a principle tends toward a consolidation of power in which the interests of the absolute majority always prevail over those of the minority. Calhoun believed that the great achievement of the American constitution was in checking the tyranny of a numerical majority through institutional procedures that required a concurrent majority, such that each important interest must consent to the actions of government. To secure a concurrent majority, those interests that have a numerical majority must compromise with the interests that are in the minority. A concurrent majority requires a unanimous consent of all the major interests in a community, which is the only sure way of preventing tyranny of the majority. This idea supported Calhoun's doctrine of interposition or nullification, in which the state governments could refuse to enforce or comply with a policy of the Federal government that threatened the vital interests of the states.[147]

Historian Richard Hofstadter (1948) emphasizes that Calhoun's conception of minority was very different from the minorities of a century later:

Not in the slightest was [Calhoun] concerned with minority rights as they are chiefly of interest to the modern liberal mind—the rights of dissenters to express unorthodox opinions, of the individual conscience against the State, least of all of ethnic minorities. At bottom he was not interested in any minority that was not a propertied minority. The concurrent majority itself was a device without relevance to the protection of dissent, designed to protect a vested interest of considerable power ... it was minority privileges rather than [minority] rights that he really proposed to protect.[148]

Unlike Jefferson, Calhoun rejected attempts at economic, social, or political leveling, claiming that true equality could not be achieved if all classes were given equal rights and responsibilities. Rather, to ensure true prosperity, it was necessary for a stronger group to provide protection and care for the weaker one. This meant that the two groups should not be equal before the law. For Calhoun, "protection" (order) was more important than freedom. Individual rights were something to be earned, not something bestowed by nature or God.[127] Calhoun was concerned with protecting the interests of the Southern States (which he identified with the interests of their slaveholding elites) as a distinct and beleaguered minority among the members of the federal Union; his idea of a concurrent majority as a protection for minority rights has gained some acceptance in American political thought.[149][150] Political scientist Malcolm Jewell argues, "The decision-making process in this country resembles John Calhoun's 'concurrent majority': A large number of groups both within and outside the government must, in practice, approve any major policy."[151]

Calhoun's ideas on the concurrent majority are illustrated in A Disquisition on Government. The Disquisition is a 100-page essay on Calhoun's definitive and comprehensive ideas on government, which he worked on intermittently for six years until its 1849 completion.[152] It systematically presents his arguments that a numerical majority in any government will typically impose a despotism over a minority unless some way is devised to secure the assent of all classes, sections, and interests and, similarly, that innate human depravity would debase government in a democracy.[153]

State sovereignty and the "Calhoun Doctrine" edit

In the 1840s three interpretations of the constitutional powers of Congress to deal with slavery in territories emerged: the "free-soil doctrine," the "popular sovereignty position," and the "Calhoun doctrine". The Free Soilers stated that Congress had the power to outlaw slavery in the territories. The popular sovereignty position argued that the voters living there should decide. The Calhoun doctrine said that neither Congress nor the citizens of the territories could outlaw slavery in the territories.[154]

In what historian Robert R. Russell calls the "Calhoun Doctrine", Calhoun argued that the Federal Government's role in the territories was only that of the trustee or agent of the several sovereign states: it was obliged not to discriminate among the states and hence was incapable of forbidding the bringing into any territory of anything that was legal property in any state. Calhoun argued that citizens from every state had the right to take their property to any territory. Congress and local voters, he asserted, had no authority to place restrictions on slavery in the territories.[155] In a February 1847 speech before the Senate, Calhoun declared that "the enactment of any law which should directly, or by its effects, deprive the citizens of any of the States of this Union from emigrating, with their property, in to any of the territories of the United States, will make such discrimination and would therefore be a violation of the Constitution". Enslavers therefore had a fundamental right to take their property wherever they wished.[156] As constitutional historian Hermann von Holst noted, "Calhoun's doctrine made it a solemn constitutional duty of the United States government and of the American people to act as if the existence or non-existence of slavery in the Territories did not concern them in the least."[157] The Calhoun Doctrine was opposed by the Free Soil forces, which merged into the new Republican Party around 1854.[158] Chief Justice Roger B. Taney used Calhoun's arguments in his decision in the 1857 Supreme Court case Dred Scott v. Sandford, in which he ruled that the federal government could not prohibit slavery in any of the territories.

Legacy edit

 
John C. Calhoun postage stamp, CSA issue of 1862, unused
 
Confederate First issue banknote depicting both Calhoun and Andrew Jackson (Act of March 9, 1861)

Monuments and memorials edit

Many different places, streets, and schools were named after Calhoun, as may be seen on the list linked above. Some, such as Springfield, Illinois (1832)[159] and Jackson County, Kansas (1859), were subsequently renamed. The "Immortal Trio" (Calhoun, Daniel Webster, and Henry Clay) were memorialized with streets in Uptown New Orleans.

In June 2020, Clemson University removed John C. Calhoun's name from Clemson University Calhoun Honors College, renaming it to Clemson University Honors College. This action was taken in response to a petition which was supported by NFL stars DeAndre Hopkins and Deshaun Watson who are Clemson University alumni.[160] Against the backdrop of the George Floyd protests,[161] University chairman Smyth McKissick said that "we must recognize there are central figures in Clemson's history whose ideals, beliefs and actions do not represent the university's core values of respect and diversity".[160]

The Confederate government honored Calhoun on a 1¢ postage stamp, which was printed in 1862 but was never officially released.[162]

In 1887, at the height of the Jim Crow era, white segregationists erected a monument to Calhoun in Marion Square in Charleston, South Carolina; the base was within easy reach and the local black population defaced it. Finally, it was replaced in 1896 standing atop a column base at a total of 115 feet[163] as well as fenced in to deter attackers. It continued as a target of vandalism regardless.[164][165] The statue has been a topic of debate for a long time. In 2017, Charleston's city council deferred a proposal to put a plaque on the statue that would have stated his white-supremacist views.[166] It was No. 5 on the Make It Right Project's 2018 list of the 10 Confederate monuments it most wanted removed.[167] The Make It Right Project organized a protest at the monument on May 16, 2019.[168] The monument was removed on June 24, 2020,[169] following a unanimous vote by the Charleston City Council to relocate the monument.[170]

 
John C. Calhoun statue in National Statuary Hall Collection at the U.S. Capitol

In 1910, the state of South Carolina gave a statue of Calhoun to the National Statuary Hall Collection in the United States Capitol.[171] Also in the Capitol, there is an 1896 bust of Calhoun in the U.S. Senate Vice Presidential Bust Collection, and he is one of the "Famous Five" former members originally selected by the Senate in 1957 to be honored with a portrait in Senate Reception Room.[172][173]

In 1817, surveyors sent by Secretary of War Calhoun to map the area around Fort Snelling named the largest lake in what became Minneapolis, Minnesota, for him.[174] Two centuries later, the city of Minneapolis renamed the lake with the Dakota language name Bde Maka Ska, meaning "White Earth Lake" or "White Banks Lake".[175] The Calhoun-Isles Community Band in the Uptown district of Minneapolis changed its name to City of Lakes Community Band in November 2018, to distance itself from Calhoun's pro-slavery legacy, following the renaming of the lake.[176] Calhoun Square and Calhoun Beach Club, both in Minneapolis, announced name changes, and the road around the lake was renamed Bde Maka Ska Parkway.[177] In 2022, the city councilors of Savannah, Georgia, voted unanimously to remove his name from Calhoun Square.[178]

Film and television edit

Calhoun was portrayed by actor Arliss Howard in the 1997 film Amistad. The film depicts the controversy and legal battle surrounding the status of slaves who in 1839 rebelled against their transporters on the La Amistad slave ship.[179]

Historical reputation edit

Calhoun was despised by Jackson and his supporters for his alleged attempts to subvert the unity of the nation for his own political gain. On his deathbed, Jackson regretted that he had not had Calhoun executed for treason. "My country," he declared, "would have sustained me in the act, and his fate would have been a warning to traitors in all time to come."[79] Even after his death, Calhoun's reputation among Jacksonians remained poor. They disparaged him by portraying him as a man thirsty for power, who when he failed to attain it, sought to tear down his country with him.

According to Parton, writing in 1860:

The old Jackson men of the inner set still speak of Mr. Calhoun in terms which show that they consider him at once the most wicked and the most despicable of American statesmen. He was a coward, conspirator, hypocrite, traitor, and fool, say they. He strove, schemed, dreamed, lived only for the presidency; and when he despaired of reaching that office through honorable means, he sought to rise upon the ruins of his country-thinking it better to reign in South Carolina than to serve in the United States. General Jackson lived and died in this opinion.[79]

Writing more than thirty years after Calhoun's death, James G. Blaine portrayed him as a mix of personal integrity and wrongheaded ideology:

Deplorable as was the end to which his teachings led, he could not have acquired the influence he wielded over millions of men unless he had been gifted with acute intellect, distinguished by moral excellence, and inspired by the sincerest belief in the righteousness of his cause. History will adjudge him to have been single-hearted and honest in his political creed. It will equally adjudge him to have been wrong in his theory of the Federal Government, and dead to the awakened sentiment of Christendom in his views concerning the enslavement of man.[180]

Calhoun is often remembered for his defense of minority rights, in the context of defending white Southern interests from perceived Northern threats, by use of the "concurrent majority". He is also noted and criticized for his strong defense of slavery. These positions played an enormous role in influencing Southern secessionist leaders by strengthening the trend of sectionalism, thus contributing to the Civil War.[127]

External videos
  Booknotes interview with Irving Bartlett on John C. Calhoun: A Biography, August 16, 1994, C-SPAN

Biographer Irving Bartlett wrote:

Posterity decided against Calhoun's argument for the indefinite protection of slavery more than 130 years ago. What he had to say about the need in popular governments like our own to protect the rights of minorities, about the importance of choosing leaders with character, talent, and the willingness to speak hard truths to the people, and about the enduring need, in a vast and various country like our own, for the people themselves to develop and sustain both the civic culture and the institutional structures which contribute to their lasting interest is as fresh and significant today as it was in 1850.[181]

Calhoun has been held in regard by some Lost Cause of the Confederacy historians, who hold a romanticized view of the antebellum Southern way of life and its cause during the Civil War. Historians such as Charles M. Wiltse and Margaret Coit have, in their writings, portrayed Calhoun as a sympathetic or heroic figure.[182][183]

John Niven paints a portrait of Calhoun that is both sympathetic and tragic. He says that Calhoun's ambition and personal desires "were often thwarted by lesser men than he". Niven identifies Calhoun as a "driven man and a tragic figure". He argues that Calhoun was motivated by the near-disaster of the War of 1812, of which he was a "thoughtless advocate," to work towards fighting for the freedoms and securities of the white Southern people against any kind of threat. Ultimately, Niven says, he "would overcompensate and in the end would more than any other individual destroy the culture he sought to preserve, perpetuating for several generations the very insecurity that had shaped his public career".[184]

In 1957, a five-member "special" committee, led by Senator John F. Kennedy, selected Calhoun as one of the five senators to enter the newly created senatorial pantheon "hall of fame". This "hall of fame" was established to fill five vacant portrait spaces in the Senate Reception Room.[185][186][187]

Recently, Calhoun's reputation has suffered particularly due to his defense of slavery.[183] The racially motivated Charleston church shooting in South Carolina in June 2015 reinvigorated demands for the removal of monuments dedicated to prominent pro-slavery and Confederate States figures. That month, the monument to Calhoun in Charleston was found vandalized, with spray-painted denunciations of Calhoun as a racist and a defender of slavery.[188] Later, in 2020, during the George Floyd protests in South Carolina, the monument was vandalized with signs and spray paint, with calls from the public demanding its removal, causing the city of Charleston to erect a chain-link fence around the statue to prevent the public from accessing it, before announcing on June 23, 2020, that the statue would be removed.[189]

In response to decades of requests, Yale President Peter Salovey announced in 2017 that the university's Calhoun College would be renamed to honor Grace Hopper, a pioneering computer programmer, mathematician and Navy rear admiral who graduated from Yale.[190] Calhoun is commemorated elsewhere on the campus, including the exterior of Harkness Tower, a prominent campus landmark, as one of Yale's "Eight Worthies".[191]

See also edit

References edit

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Bibliography edit

Biographies edit

  • Bartlett, Irving (1994). John C. Calhoun: A Biography. New York: W.W. Norton, Inc. ISBN 978-0-393-33286-5.
  • Coit, Margaret L. (1950). John C. Calhoun: American Portrait. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin. ISBN 0-87797-185-4.; popular biography
  • von Holst, Hermann E. (1883). John C. Calhoun. Boston: Houghton Mifflin and Company.; outdated
  • Meigs, William Montgomery (1917). The Life of John Caldwell Calhoun. Washington, D.C.: Neale Publishing Company. ISBN 978-0-7950-0918-1.
  • Niven, John (1988). John C. Calhoun and the Price of Union: A Biography. Baton Rouge: LSU Press. ISBN 978-0-8071-1858-0.
  • Wiltse, Charles M. (1944). John C. Calhoun, Nationalist, 1782–1828. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill Company. ISBN 0-8462-1041-X.
  • "John Caldwell Calhoun." Dictionary of American Biography (1936) online

Specialized studies edit

  • Ashworth, John (1995). Slavery, Capitalism, and Politics in the Antebellum Republic: Volume 1, Commerce and Compromise, 1820–1850. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-47487-0.
  • Baptist, Edward E. (2014). The Half has Never Been Told: Slavery and the Making of American Capitalism. New York: Basic Books. ISBN 978-04650-0296-2.
  • Barney, William L. (2011). The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Civil War. Oxford / New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-978201-7.
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  • Bates, Christopher G. (2015). The Early Republic and Antebellum America: An Encyclopedia of Social, Political, Cultural, and Economic History. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-45740-4.
  • Belko, William S. (2004). "John C. Calhoun and the Creation of the Bureau of Indian Affairs: An Essay on Political Rivalry, Ideology, and Policymaking in the Early Republic". South Carolina Historical Magazine. 105 (3): 170–197. JSTOR 27570693.
  • Borneman, Walter R. (2009). Polk: The Man Who Transformed the Presidency and America. New York: Random House. ISBN 978-1-58836-772-3.
  • Brands, H.W. (2005). Andrew Jackson: His Life and Times. New York: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. ISBN 1-4000-3072-2.
  • Byrnes, Mark E. (2001). James K. Polk: A Biographical Companion. New York, NY: Bloomsbury Publishing USA. ISBN 978-1-57607-535-7.
  • Capers, Gerald M. (1960). . Vol. 14. Gainesville: University of Florida Press. Archived from the original on June 10, 2012. Retrieved September 1, 2017.
  • Cheathem, Mark Renfred (2008). Jacksonian and Antebellum Age: People and Perspectives. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-59884-017-9.
  • Cheek, H. Lee (2004). Calhoun and Popular Rule: The Political Theory of the Disquisition and Discourse. Columbia, MO: University of Missouri Press. ISBN 978-0-8262-1548-2.
  • Crallé, R.K., ed. (1888). "Report Prepared for the Committee on Federal Relations of the Legislature of South Carolina, at its Session in November, 1831". The Works of John C. Calhoun. Vol. VI. D. Appleton.
  • Douglas, Bradburn (2009). The Citizenship Revolution: Politics and the Creation of the American Union, 1774–1804. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press. ISBN 978-0-8139-3031-2.
  • Durham, David I. (2008). A Southern Moderate in Radical Times: Henry Washington Hilliard, 1808–1892. Baton Rouge: LSU Press. ISBN 978-0-8071-3422-1.
  • Ellis, James H. (2009). A Ruinous and Unhappy War: New England and the War of 1812. New York: Algora Publishing. ISBN 978-0-87586-691-8.
  • Fehrenbacher, Don Edward (1981). Slavery, Law, and Politics: The Dred Scott Case in Historical Perspective. Oxford / New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-502883-6.
  • Foner, Eric (1995). Free Soil, Free Labor, Free Men: The Ideology of the Republican Party before the Civil War: With a new Introductory Essay. Oxford / New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-509497-8.
  • Ford, Lacy K. Jr (1988). "Republican Ideology in a Slave Society: The Political Economy of John C. Calhoun". Journal of Southern History. 54 (3): 405–424. doi:10.2307/2208996. JSTOR 2208996.
  • Ford, Lacy K. Jr (1994). "Inventing the Concurrent Majority: Madison, Calhoun, and the Problem of Majoritarianism in American Political Thought". Journal of Southern History. 60 (1): 19–58. doi:10.2307/2210719. JSTOR 2210719.
  • Freehling, William W. (1965). "Spoilsmen and Interests in the Thought and Career of John C. Calhoun". Journal of American History. 52 (1): 25–42. doi:10.2307/1901122. JSTOR 1901122.
  • Hofstadter, Richard (2011). "John C. Calhoun: The Marx of the Master Class". The American Political Tradition: And the Men Who Made it. New York: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-307-80966-7.
  • Holt, Michael F. (2004). The Fate of Their Country: Politicians, Slavery Extension, and the Coming of the Civil War. New York: Hill and Wang. ISBN 978-0-8090-9518-6.
  • Howe, Daniel Walker (2007). What Hath God Wrought: the Transformation of America, 1815–1848. Oxford / New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-507894-7.
  • Jervey, Theodore Dehon (1909). Robert Y. Hayne and His Times. New York: The MacMillan Company. ISBN 978-0-7222-4580-4.
  • Jewell, Malcolm E. (2015). Senatorial Politics and Foreign Policy. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 978-0-8131-6340-6.
  • Jewett, James C. (1908). "The United States Congress of 1817 and Some of its Celebrities". The William and Mary Quarterly. 17 (2): 139–145. doi:10.2307/1916057. ISSN 0043-5597. JSTOR 1916057.
  • Kateb, George (1969). "The Majority Principle: Calhoun and His Antecedents". Political Science Quarterly. 84 (4): 583–605. doi:10.2307/2147126. JSTOR 2147126.
  • Kirk, Russell (2001). The Conservative Mind: From Burke to Eliot. Washington, D.C.: Regnery Publishing. ISBN 978-0-89526-171-7.
  • Langguth, A.J. (2006). Union 1812: The Americans who Fought the Second War of Independence. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-7432-2618-9.
  • May, Gary (2008). John Tyler. New York: Henry Holt and Company. ISBN 978-0-8050-8238-8.
  • Marszalek, John F. (2000) [1997]. The Petticoat Affair: Manners, Mutiny, and Sex in Andrew Jackson's White House. Baton Rouge: LSU Press. ISBN 978-0-8071-5578-3.
  • McKellar, Kenneth (1942). Tennessee Senators as Seen by One of their Successors. Kingsport, TN: Southern Publishers, Inc.
  • Merk, Frederick (1978). History of the Westward Movement. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. ISBN 978-0-7432-9743-1.
  • Merry, Robert W. (2009). A Country of Vast Designs: James K. Polk, the Mexican War, and the Conquest of the American Continent. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-7432-9743-1.
  • Miller, William Lee (1996). Arguing About Slavery. John Quincy Adams and the Great Battle in the United States Congress. New York: Vintage Books. ISBN 0-394-56922-9.
  • Parton, James (1860). Life of Andrew Jackson, Volume 3. New York: Mason Brothers. OCLC 3897681.
  • Perkins, Bradford (1961). Prologue to War: England and the United States, 1805–1812. Oakland: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-00996-7.
  • Perman, Michael (2012). The Southern Political Tradition. LSU Press. ISBN 978-0-8071-4468-8.
  • Peterson, Merrill D. (1988). Great Triumvirate: Webster, Clay, and Calhoun. Oxford / New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-505686-8.
  • Phillips, Ulrich Bonnell (1929). "Calhoun, John Caldwell, 1782–1850". Dictionary of American Biography. Vol. 3. Scribner. pp. 411–419.
  • Prucha, Francis Paul (1997). American Indian Treaties: The History of a Political Anomaly. Oakland, California: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-91916-7.
  • Remini, Robert V. (1977). Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Empire, 1767–1821. New York: Harper & Row Publishers, Inc. ISBN 0-8018-5912-3.
  • Remini, Robert V. (1981). Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Freedom, 1822–1832. New York: Harper & Row Publishers, Inc. ISBN 978-0-8018-5913-7.
  • Remini, Robert V. (1984). Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Democracy, 1833–1845. New York: Harper & Row Publishers, Inc. ISBN 978-0-8018-5913-7.
  • Rosen, Jeffrey (2007). The Supreme Court: The Personalities and Rivalries That Defined America. New York: Henry Holt and Company. ISBN 978-1-4299-0461-2.
  • Russell, Robert R. (1966). "Constitutional Doctrines with Regard to Slavery in Territories". Journal of Southern History. 32 (4): 466–486. doi:10.2307/2204926. JSTOR 2204926.
  • Rutland, Robert Allen (1997). James Madison: The Founding Father. Columbia: University of Missouri Press. ISBN 978-0-8262-1141-5.
  • Satz, Ronald N. (1974). American Indian Policy in the Jacksonian Era. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-3432-1.
  • Stagg, J.C.A. (2012). The War of 1812: Conflict for a Continent. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-89820-1.
  • Varon, Elizabeth R. (2008). Disunion!: The Coming of the American Civil War, 1789–1859. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-8718-9.
  • Wilentz, Sean (2006). The Rise of American Democracy: Jefferson to Lincoln. New York: W.W. Norton & Company. ISBN 0-393-05820-4.

Primary sources edit

  • Calhoun, John Caldwell (1837). Speeches of Mr. Calhoun of S. Carolina, on the Bill for the Admission of Michigan: Delivered in the Senate of the United States, January, 1837.
  • Calhoun, John C. (1870). Crallé, Richard K. (ed.). The Works of John C. Calhoun: Reports and public letters. New York: D. Appleton & Company.
  • Calhoun, John C. (1992). Lence, Ross M. (ed.). Union and Liberty: The Political Philosophy of John C. Calhoun. Indianapolis: Liberty Fund. ISBN 0-86597-102-1.
  • Calhoun, John C. (2017). Beck, Juergen (ed.). The Works of John C. Calhoun Volume 1. Jazzybee Verlag. ISBN 978-3-84967-688-9.
  • Calhoun, John C. (2017). Beck, Juergen (ed.). The Works of John C. Calhoun Volume 2. Jazzybee Verlag. ISBN 978-3-84967-689-6.
  • Calhoun, John Caldwell; Post, Charles Gordon (1995). A Disquisition on Government and Selections from the Discourse. Indianapolis: Hackett Publishing. ISBN 0-87220-293-3.
  • Calhoun, John C. (1999). Wilson, Clyde N. (ed.). The Papers of John C. Calhoun, vol. 25. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press. ISBN 978-1-57003-306-3.
  • Calhoun, John C. (2003). Wilson, Clyde N. (ed.). The Papers of John C. Calhoun, vol. 27. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press.
  • Calhoun, John C. (2003). Cheek, Lee H. (ed.). John C. Calhoun: Selected Writings and Speeches. Washington, D.C.: Regnery Publishing. ISBN 0-89526-179-0.

Further reading edit

  • Boucher, Chauncey S.; Brooks, Robert P., eds. (1931). "Correspondence Addressed to John C. Calhoun, 1837–1849". Annual Report of the American Historical Association, 1929.
  • Brown, Guy Story (2000). Calhoun's Philosophy of Politics: A Study of A Disquisition on Government. Mercer, GA: Mercer University Press.
  • Calhoun, John C. (February 6, 1837). Slavery a Positive Good  (Speech). United States Senate.
  • Capers, Gerald M. (1948). "A Reconsideration of Calhoun's Transition from Nationalism to Nullification". Journal of Southern History. 14 (1): 34–48. doi:10.2307/2197709. JSTOR 2197709.
  • Coit, Margaret L., ed. (1970). John C. Calhoun: Great Lives Observed. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall. ISBN 978-0-13-112409-7. Excerpts from scholars.
  • Current, Richard N. (1966). John C. Calhoun. New York: Simon & Schuster.
  • Fitzgerald, Michael S. (1996). "Rejecting Calhoun's Expansible Army Plan: the Army Reduction Act of 1821". War in History. 3 (2): 161–185. doi:10.1177/096834459600300202. S2CID 111159741.
  • Ford, Lacy K. (1988). "Recovering the republic: Calhoun, South Carolina, and the concurrent majority". South Carolina Historical Magazine. 89 (3): 146–159. JSTOR 27568041.
  • Grove, John G. (2014). "Binding the Republic Together: The Early Political Thought of John C. Calhoun". South Carolina Historical Magazine. 115 (2): 100–121.
  • Gutzman, Kevin (2002). "Paul to Jeremiah: Calhoun's Abandonment of Nationalism". The Journal of Libertarian Studies. 16 (3): 33.
  • Kytle, Ethan J.; Roberts, Blain (2018). Denmark Vesey's Garden: Slavery and Memory in the Cradle of the Confederacy. New York: The New Press. ISBN 978-1-62097-365-3.
  • Jarvis, Douglas Edward (2013). "The Southern Conservative Thought of John C. Calhoun and the Cultural Foundations of the Canadian Identity". American Review of Canadian Studies. 43 (3): 297–314. doi:10.1080/02722011.2013.819584. S2CID 144819256.
  • Krannawitter, Thomas L. (2008). Vindicating Lincoln: Defending the Politics of Our Greatest President. Lanham, MS: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. ISBN 978-0-7425-5972-1.
  • Kuic, V (1983). "John C. Calhoun's Theory of the Concurrent Majority". American Bar Association Journal. 69: 482.
  • Lerner, Ralph. (1963). "Calhoun's New Science of Politics". American Political Science Review. 57 (4): 918–932. doi:10.2307/1952609. JSTOR 1952609. S2CID 145581750.
  • McBride, Fred. (1997). "Strange Bedfellows: The Political Thought of John C. Calhoun and Lani Guinier". Journal of Black Political Research.
  • Merriam, Charles E. (1902). "The Political Theory of Calhoun". American Journal of Sociology. 7 (5): 577–594. doi:10.1086/211084. JSTOR 2762212. S2CID 143813301.
  • Polin, Constance; Polin, Raymond (2006). Foundations of American Political Thought. Switzerland: Peter Lang. ISBN 978-0-8204-7929-3.
  • Preyer, Norris W. (1959). "Southern Support of the Tariff of 1816 – a Reappraisal". Journal of Southern History. 25 (3): 306–322. doi:10.2307/2954765. JSTOR 2954765.
  • Rayback, Joseph G. (1948). "The Presidential Ambitions of John C. Calhoun, 1844–1848". Journal of Southern History. XIV (3): 331–356. doi:10.2307/2197879. JSTOR 2197879.
  • Read, James H. (2009). Majority rule versus consensus: the political thought of John C. Calhoun. Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas.
  • Smith, Henry Augustus Middleton (1911). "Calhoun, John Caldwell" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 5 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 1–3.
  • Vajda, Zoltán (2001). "John C. Calhoun's Republicanism Revisited". Rhetoric & Public Affairs. 4 (3): 433–457. doi:10.1353/rap.2001.0056. S2CID 143563365.
  • Vajda, Zoltán (2013). "Complicated Sympathies: John C. Calhoun's Sentimental Union and the South". South Carolina Historical Magazine. 114 (3): 210–230. JSTOR 23645453.
  • Walters, Raymond Jr. (1945). "The Origins of the Second Bank of the United States". Journal of Political Economy. 53 (2): 115–131. doi:10.1086/256246. JSTOR 1825049. S2CID 153635866.
  • Wilentz, Sean (2008). The Rise of American Democracy: Jefferson to Lincoln. New York: W. W. Norton and Company.
  • Wiltse, Charles M. (1941). "Calhoun's Democracy". Journal of Politics. 3 (2): 210–223. doi:10.2307/2125432. JSTOR 2125432. S2CID 154416098.
  • Wiltse, Charles M. (1948). John C. Calhoun, Nullifier, 1829–1839. Indianapolis, IN: Bobbs-Merrill.
  • Wiltse, Charles M. (1951). John C. Calhoun, Sectionalist, 1840–1850. Indianapolis, IN: Bobbs-Merrill.
  • Wood, W. Kirk (2009). "History and Recovery of the Past: John C. Calhoun and the Origins of Nullification in South Carolina, 1819–1828". Southern Studies. 16: 46–68.

External links edit

Listen to this article (1 hour and 17 minutes)
 
This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 28 February 2019 (2019-02-28), and does not reflect subsequent edits.
  • Biography at the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress
  • Works by John C. Calhoun at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by John C. Calhoun at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Works by or about John C. Calhoun at Internet Archive
  • John C. Calhoun: A Resource Guide from the Library of Congress
  • University of Virginia: John C. Calhoun – Timeline, quotes, & contemporaries, via University of Virginia
  • Other images via The College of New Jersey: , ,
  • Birthplace of Calhoun Historical Marker
  • The Law Offices of John C. Calhoun Monument
  • Disquisition on Government and other papers by John Calhoun.
  • John C. Calhoun Papers at Clemson University's Special Collections Library
  • 2015 petition to Charleston City Council to change the name of Calhoun Street
U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from South Carolina's 6th congressional district

1811–1817
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by United States Secretary of War
1817–1825
Succeeded by
Preceded by Vice President of the United States
1825–1832
Succeeded by
Preceded by United States Secretary of State
1844–1845
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Democratic-Republican nominee for Vice President of the United States¹
1824
Served alongside: Albert Gallatin (withdrew), Nathaniel Macon, Nathan Sanford
Position abolished
New political party Democratic nominee for Vice President of the United States
1828
Succeeded by
U.S. Senate
Preceded by U.S. Senator (Class 2) from South Carolina
1832–1843
Served alongside: Stephen Miller, William C. Preston, George McDuffie
Succeeded by
Preceded by U.S. Senator (Class 2) from South Carolina
1845–1850
Served alongside: George McDuffie, Andrew Butler
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chair of the Senate Finance Committee
1845–1846
Succeeded by
Notes and references
1. The Democratic-Republican Party split in the 1824 election, fielding four separate candidates.

john, calhoun, john, calhoun, senator, calhoun, redirect, here, other, uses, john, calhoun, disambiguation, senator, calhoun, disambiguation, john, caldwell, calhoun, march, 1782, march, 1850, american, statesman, political, theorist, served, seventh, vice, pr. John Calhoun and Senator Calhoun redirect here For other uses see John Calhoun disambiguation and Senator Calhoun disambiguation John Caldwell Calhoun k ae l ˈ h uː n 1 March 18 1782 March 31 1850 was an American statesman and political theorist who served as the seventh vice president of the United States from 1825 to 1832 Born in South Carolina he adamantly defended American slavery and sought to protect the interests of white Southerners Calhoun began his political career as a nationalist modernizer and proponent of a strong federal government and protective tariffs In the late 1820s his views changed radically and he became a leading proponent of states rights limited government nullification and opposition to high tariffs Calhoun saw Northern acceptance of those policies as a condition of the South s remaining in the Union His beliefs heavily influenced the South s secession from the Union in 1860 and 1861 He was the first of two vice presidents to resign from the position the second being Spiro Agnew who resigned in 1973 John C CalhounPortrait c 18457th Vice President of the United StatesIn office March 4 1825 December 28 1832PresidentJohn Quincy Adams 1825 1829 Andrew Jackson 1829 1832 Preceded byDaniel D TompkinsSucceeded byMartin Van BurenUnited States Senatorfrom South CarolinaIn office November 26 1845 March 31 1850Preceded byDaniel Elliott HugerSucceeded byFranklin H ElmoreIn office December 29 1832 March 3 1843Preceded byRobert Y HayneSucceeded byDaniel Elliott Huger16th United States Secretary of StateIn office April 1 1844 March 10 1845PresidentJohn TylerJames K PolkPreceded byAbel P UpshurSucceeded byJames Buchanan10th United States Secretary of WarIn office December 8 1817 March 4 1825PresidentJames MonroePreceded byGeorge Graham acting William H CrawfordSucceeded byJames BarbourMember of the U S House of Representatives from South Carolina s 6th districtIn office March 4 1811 November 3 1817Preceded byJoseph CalhounSucceeded byEldred SimkinsPersonal detailsBornJohn Caldwell Calhoun 1782 03 18 March 18 1782Abbeville South Carolina U S DiedMarch 31 1850 1850 03 31 aged 68 Washington D C U S Resting placeSt Philip s ChurchPolitical partyDemocratic Republican before 1828 Democratic 1828 1839 1850 Nullifier 1828 1839 SpouseFloride Bonneau Calhoun m 1811 wbr Children10 including Anna Maria Calhoun ClemsonParent s Patrick CalhounMartha CaldwellEducationYale CollegeLitchfield Law SchoolSignatureCalhoun began his political career with election to the House of Representatives in 1810 As a prominent leader of the war hawk faction he strongly supported the War of 1812 Calhoun served as Secretary of War under President James Monroe and in that position reorganized and modernized the War Department He was a candidate for the presidency in the 1824 election After failing to gain support Calhoun agreed to be a candidate for vice president The Electoral College elected him vice president by an overwhelming majority He served under John Quincy Adams and continued under Andrew Jackson who defeated Adams in the election of 1828 making Calhoun the most recent U S vice president to serve under two different presidents He had a difficult relationship with Jackson primarily because of the Nullification Crisis and the Petticoat affair In contrast with his previous nationalist sentiments Calhoun vigorously supported South Carolina s right to nullify federal tariff legislation that he believed unfairly favored the North which put him into conflict with Unionists such as Jackson In 1832 with only a few months remaining in his second term Calhoun resigned as vice president and entered the Senate He sought the Democratic Party nomination for the presidency in 1844 but lost to surprise nominee James K Polk who won the general election Calhoun served as Secretary of State under President John Tyler from 1844 to 1845 and in that role supported the annexation of Texas as a means to extend the Slave Power and helped to settle the Oregon boundary dispute with Britain Calhoun returned to the Senate where he opposed the Mexican American War the Wilmot Proviso and the Compromise of 1850 before he died of tuberculosis in 1850 He often served as a virtual independent who variously aligned as needed with Democrats and Whigs Later in life Calhoun became known as the cast iron man for his rigid defense of white Southern beliefs and practices 2 3 His concept of republicanism emphasized proslavery thought and minority states rights as embodied by the South He owned dozens of slaves in Fort Hill South Carolina and asserted that slavery rather than being a necessary evil was a positive good that benefited both slaves and enslavers 4 To protect minority rights against majority rule he called for a concurrent majority by which the minority could block some proposals that it felt infringed on their liberties To that end Calhoun supported states rights and nullification through which states could declare null and void federal laws that they viewed as unconstitutional He was one of the Great Triumvirate or the Immortal Trio of congressional leaders along with his colleagues Daniel Webster and Henry Clay Contents 1 Early life 2 Personal life 3 House of Representatives 3 1 War of 1812 3 2 Postwar planning 3 3 Rhetorical style 4 Secretary of War and postwar nationalism 5 Vice presidency 1825 1832 5 1 1824 and 1828 elections and Adams presidency 5 2 Petticoat affair 5 3 Nullification 5 4 Resignation 6 First term in the U S Senate 7 Secretary of State 7 1 Appointment and the Annexation of Texas 7 2 Election of 1844 8 Second term in the Senate 8 1 Mexican American War and Wilmot Proviso 8 2 Oregon boundary dispute 8 3 Rejection of the Compromise of 1850 9 Death and burial 10 Political philosophy 10 1 Agrarian republicanism 10 2 Slavery 10 3 Opposition to the War with Mexico 10 4 Concurrent majority 10 5 State sovereignty and the Calhoun Doctrine 11 Legacy 11 1 Monuments and memorials 11 2 Film and television 11 3 Historical reputation 12 See also 13 References 14 Bibliography 14 1 Biographies 14 2 Specialized studies 14 3 Primary sources 15 Further reading 16 External linksEarly life editJohn Caldwell Calhoun was born in Abbeville District South Carolina on March 18 1782 He was the fourth child of Irish born Patrick Calhoun and his wife Martha Caldwell Patrick s father also named Patrick joined the waves of Scotch Irish emigration from County Donegal to southwestern Pennsylvania After the death of the elder Patrick in 1741 the family moved to Virginia Following the British defeat at the Battle of the Monongahela in 1755 the family fearing Indian attacks moved to South Carolina in 1756 5 6 Patrick a prominent member of the tight knit Scotch Irish community on the frontier who worked as surveyor and farmer was elected to the South Carolina Legislature in 1763 and acquired ownership over slave plantations As a Presbyterian he stood opposed to the established Anglican planter class based in Charleston Patrick remained neutral in the American Revolution and opposed ratification of the U S Constitution on grounds of states rights and personal liberties Calhoun would eventually adopt his father s beliefs on states rights 7 8 Young Calhoun showed scholastic talent and although schools were scarce on the Carolina frontier he was enrolled briefly in an academy taught by his brother in law Moses Waddel It stressed the Latin and Greek classics He continued his studies privately When his father died his brothers were away starting business careers and so the 14 year old Calhoun took over management of the family farm and five other farms For four years he simultaneously kept up his reading and his hunting and fishing The family decided he should continue his education and so he resumed studies at Waddel s academy after it reopened 9 With financing from his brothers he went to Yale College in Connecticut in 1802 For the first time in his life Calhoun encountered serious advanced and well organized intellectual dialogue that could shape his mind Yale was dominated by President Timothy Dwight a Federalist who became his mentor Dwight s brilliance entranced and sometimes repelled Calhoun Biographer John Niven says Calhoun admired Dwight s extemporaneous sermons his seemingly encyclopedic knowledge and his awesome mastery of the classics of the tenets of Calvinism and of metaphysics No one he thought could explicate the language of John Locke with such clarity 10 Dwight repeatedly denounced Jeffersonian democracy and Calhoun challenged him in class Dwight could not shake Calhoun s commitment to republicanism Young man retorted Dwight your talents are of a high order and might justify you for any station but I deeply regret that you do not love sound principles better than sophistry you seem to possess a most unfortunate bias for error 11 Dwight also expounded on the strategy of secession from the Union as a legitimate solution for New England s disagreements with the national government 12 13 Calhoun made friends easily read widely and was a noted member of the debating society of Brothers in Unity He graduated as valedictorian in 1804 He studied law at the nation s first independent law school Tapping Reeve Law School in Litchfield Connecticut where he worked with Tapping Reeve and James Gould He was admitted to the South Carolina bar in 1807 14 Biographer Margaret Coit argues that every principle of secession or states rights which Calhoun ever voiced can be traced right back to the thinking of intellectual New England Not the South not slavery but Yale College and Litchfield Law School made Calhoun a nullifier Dwight Reeve and Gould could not convince the young patriot from South Carolina as to the desirability of secession but they left no doubts in his mind as to its legality 15 Personal life edit nbsp Calhoun s wife Floride CalhounIn January 1811 Calhoun married Floride Bonneau Colhoun a first cousin once removed 16 She was the daughter of wealthy United States Senator and lawyer John E Colhoun a leader of Charleston high society The couple had ten children Andrew Pickens 1811 1865 17 Floride Pure 1814 1815 18 Jane 1816 1816 18 Anna Maria 1817 1875 who married Thomas Green Clemson who later founded Clemson University in South Carolina 19 Elizabeth 1819 1820 18 Patrick 1821 1858 17 John Caldwell Jr 1823 1850 17 Martha Cornelia 1824 1857 17 James Edward 1826 1861 17 William Lowndes 1829 1858 17 Calhoun was not openly religious and was generally not outspoken about his religious beliefs He was raised as an orthodox Presbyterian but was attracted to Southern varieties of Unitarianism like those that attracted Jefferson Southern Unitarianism was generally less organized than the variety popular in New England After his marriage Calhoun and his wife attended the Episcopal Church of which she was a member 20 21 22 In 1821 he became a founding member of All Souls Unitarian Church in Washington D C 23 Historian Merrill D Peterson describes Calhoun Intensely serious and severe he could never write a love poem though he often tried because every line began with whereas 24 House of Representatives editWar of 1812 edit With a base among the Irish and Scotch Irish Calhoun won election to South Carolina s 6th congressional district of the House of Representatives in 1810 He immediately became a leader of the War Hawks along with Speaker Henry Clay of Kentucky and South Carolina congressmen William Lowndes and Langdon Cheves Brushing aside the vehement objections of both anti war New Englanders and ardent Jeffersonians led by John Randolph of Roanoke they demanded war against Britain claiming that American honor and republican values had been violated by the British refusal to recognize American shipping rights 9 25 As a member and later acting chairman of the Committee on Foreign Affairs Calhoun played a major role in drafting two key documents in the push for war the Report on Foreign Relations and the War Report of 1812 Drawing on the linguistic tradition of the Declaration of Independence Calhoun s committee called for a declaration of war in ringing phrases denouncing Britain s lust for power unbounded tyranny and mad ambition 26 The United States declared war on Britain on June 18 inaugurating the War of 1812 The opening phase involved multiple disasters for American arms as well as a financial crisis when the Treasury could barely pay the bills The conflict caused economic hardship for Americans as the Royal Navy blockaded the ports and cut off imports exports and the coastal trade Several attempted invasions of Canada were fiascos but the U S in 1813 seized control of Lake Erie and broke the power of hostile Indians in battles such as the Battle of the Thames in Canada in 1813 and the Battle of Horseshoe Bend in Alabama in 1814 These Indians had in many cases cooperated with the British or Spanish in opposing American interests 27 Calhoun labored to raise troops provide funds speed logistics rescue the currency and regulate commerce to aid the war effort One colleague hailed him as the young Hercules who carried the war on his shoulders 9 Disasters on the battlefield made him double his legislative efforts to overcome the obstructionism of John Randolph Daniel Webster and other opponents of the war By 1814 the British were thwarted at the invasions of New York and Baltimore but Napoleon Bonaparte capitulated meaning America would now face Britain s formidable reinforcement with units previously committed to Europe if the war were to continue British and American diplomats signed the Treaty of Ghent undertaking a return to the borders of 1812 with no gains or losses Before the treaty reached the Senate for ratification and even before news of its signing reached New Orleans a British invasion force was decisively defeated in January 1815 at the Battle of New Orleans making a national hero of General Andrew Jackson Americans celebrated what they called a second war of independence against Britain This led to the beginning of the Era of Good Feelings an era marked by the formal demise of the Federalist Party and increased nationalism 28 Postwar planning edit Despite American successes the mismanagement of the Army during the war distressed Calhoun and he resolved to strengthen and centralize the War Department 29 The militia had proven itself quite unreliable during the war and Calhoun saw the need for a permanent and professional military force In 1816 he called for building an effective navy including steam frigates as well as a standing army of adequate size The British blockade of the coast had underscored the necessity of rapid means of internal transportation Calhoun proposed a system of great permanent roads The blockade had cut off the import of manufactured items so he emphasized the need to encourage more domestic manufacture fully realizing that industry was based in the Northeast The dependence of the old financial system on import duties was devastated when the blockade cut off imports Calhoun called for a system of internal taxation that would not collapse from a war time shrinkage of maritime trade as the tariffs had done The expiration of the charter of the First Bank of the United States had also distressed the Treasury so to reinvigorate and modernize the economy Calhoun called for a new national bank A new bank was chartered as the Second Bank of the United States by Congress and approved by President James Madison in 1816 Through his proposals Calhoun emphasized a national footing and downplayed sectionalism and states rights Historian Ulrich B Phillips says that at this stage of Calhoun s career The word nation was often on his lips and his conviction was to enhance national unity which he identified with national power 30 Rhetorical style edit Regarding his career in the House of Representatives an observer commented that Calhoun was the most elegant speaker that sits in the House His gestures are easy and graceful his manner forcible and language elegant but above all he confines himself closely to the subject which he always understands and enlightens everyone within hearing 31 His talent for public speaking required systematic self discipline and practice A later critic noted the sharp contrast between his hesitant conversations and his fluent speaking styles adding that Calhoun had so carefully cultivated his naturally poor voice as to make his utterance clear full and distinct in speaking and while not at all musical it yet fell pleasantly on the ear 32 Calhoun was a high strung man of ultra intellectual cast 33 As such Calhoun was not known for charisma He was often seen as harsh and aggressive with other representatives 34 35 But he was a brilliant intellectual orator and strong organizer Historian Russell Kirk says That zeal which flared like Greek fire in Randolph burned in Calhoun too but it was contained in the Cast iron Man as in a furnace and Calhoun s passion glowed out only through his eyes No man was more stately more reserved 36 John Quincy Adams concluded in 1821 that Calhoun is a man of fair and candid mind of honorable principles of clear and quick understanding of cool self possession of enlarged philosophical views and ardent patriotism He is above all sectional and factious prejudices more than any other statesman of this Union with whom I have ever acted 37 Historian Charles Wiltse noted Calhoun s evolution Though he is known today primarily for his sectionalism Calhoun was the last of the great political leaders of his time to take a sectional position later than Daniel Webster later than Henry Clay later than Adams himself 38 Secretary of War and postwar nationalism edit nbsp Charles Bird King s 1822 portrait of Calhoun at the age of 40In 1817 the deplorable state of the War Department led four men to decline offers from President James Monroe to accept the office of Secretary of War before Calhoun finally assumed the role Calhoun took office on December 8 and served until 1825 9 He continued his role as a leading nationalist during the Era of Good Feelings He proposed an elaborate program of national reforms to the infrastructure that he believed would speed up economic modernization His priority was an effective navy including steam frigates and in the second place a standing army of adequate size and as further preparation for an emergency great permanent roads a certain encouragement to manufacturers and a system of internal taxation that would not collapse from a war time shrinkage of maritime trade like customs duties 39 A reform minded modernizer Calhoun attempted to institute centralization and efficiency in the Indian Department and in the Army by establishing new coastal and frontier fortifications and building military roads but Congress either failed to respond to his reforms or responded with hostility Calhoun s frustration with congressional inaction political rivalries and ideological differences spurred him to create the Bureau of Indian Affairs in 1824 9 40 Thomas McKenney was appointed as its first head As secretary Calhoun had responsibility for the management of Indian affairs He promoted a plan adopted by Monroe in 1825 to preserve the sovereignty of eastern Indians by relocating them to western reservations they could control without interference from state governments 41 In over seven years Calhoun supervised the negotiation and ratification of 40 treaties with Indian tribes 42 Calhoun opposed the invasion of Spanish Florida launched in 1818 by General Jackson during the First Seminole War which was done without direct authorization from Calhoun or President Monroe and in private with other cabinet members advocated censuring of Jackson as punishment Calhoun claimed that Jackson had begun a war against Spain in violation of the Constitution and that he had contradicted Calhoun s explicit orders in doing so Specific official instructions not to invade Florida or attack the Spanish were not issued by the administration 43 However Calhoun supported the execution of Alexander Arbuthnot and Robert Ambrister two British soldiers living in Florida who were accused of inciting the Seminole to make war against the United States Calhoun accused the British of being involved in wickedness corruption and barbarity at which the heart sickens and which in this enlightened age it ought not scarcely to be believed that a Christian nation would have participated He added that he hoped the executions of Arbuthnot and Ambrister would deter the British and any other nations who by false promises delude and excite an Indian tribe to all the deeds of savage war 44 The United States annexed Florida from Spain in 1819 through the Adams Onis Treaty 9 Calhoun s tenure as Secretary of War witnessed the outbreak of the Missouri crisis in December 1818 when a petition arrived from Missouri settlers seeking admission into the Union as a slave state In response Representative James Tallmadge Jr of New York proposed two amendments to the bill designed to restrict the spread of slavery into what would become the new state These amendments touched off an intense debate between North and South that had some talking openly of disunion In February 1820 Calhoun predicted to Secretary of State John Quincy Adams a New Englander that the Missouri issue would not produce a dissolution of the Union But if it should Calhoun went on the South would of necessity be compelled to form an alliance with Great Britain I said that would be returning to the colonial state Adams recalled saying afterward According to Adams He said yes pretty much but it would be forced upon them 45 After the war ended in 1815 the Old Republicans in Congress with their Jeffersonian ideology for an economy in the federal government sought to reduce the operations and finances of the War Department Calhoun s political rivalry with William H Crawford the Secretary of the Treasury over the pursuit of the presidency in the 1824 election complicated Calhoun s tenure as War Secretary The general lack of military action following the war meant that a large army such as that preferred by Calhoun was no longer considered necessary The Radicals a group of strong states rights supporters who mostly favored Crawford for president in the coming election were inherently suspicious of large armies Some allegedly also wanted to hinder Calhoun s presidential aspirations for that election 9 Thus on March 2 1821 Congress passed the Reduction Act which reduced the number of enlisted men of the army by half from 11 709 to 5 586 and the number of the officer corps by a fifth from 680 to 540 Calhoun though concerned offered little protest Later to provide the army with a more organized command structure which had been severely lacking during the War of 1812 he appointed Major General Jacob Brown to a position that would later become known as Commanding General of the United States Army 46 Vice presidency 1825 1832 edit1824 and 1828 elections and Adams presidency edit nbsp State historic marker at Fort Hill Calhoun s home from 1825 until his death in 1850Calhoun was initially a candidate for President of the United States in the election of 1824 Four other men also sought the presidency Andrew Jackson Adams Crawford and Henry Clay Calhoun failed to win the endorsement of the South Carolina legislature and his supporters in Pennsylvania decided to abandon his candidacy in favor of Jackson s and instead supported him for vice president Other states soon followed and Calhoun therefore allowed himself to become a candidate for vice president rather than president 9 47 The Electoral College elected Calhoun vice president by a landslide on December 1 1824 He won 182 of 261 electoral votes while five other men received the remaining votes 48 No presidential candidate received a majority in the Electoral College and the election was ultimately resolved by the House of Representatives where Adams was declared the winner over Crawford and Jackson who in the election had led Adams in both popular vote and electoral vote After Clay the Speaker of the House was appointed Secretary of State by Adams Jackson s supporters denounced what they considered a corrupt bargain between Adams and Clay to give Adams the presidency in exchange for Clay receiving the office of Secretary of State the holder of which had traditionally become the next president Calhoun also expressed some concerns which caused friction between him and Adams 49 Calhoun also opposed President Adams plan to send a delegation to observe a meeting of South and Central American leaders in Panama believing that the United States should stay out of foreign affairs Calhoun became disillusioned with Adams high tariff policies and increased centralization of government through a network of internal improvements which he now saw as a threat to the rights of the states Calhoun wrote to Jackson on June 4 1826 informing him that he would support Jackson s second campaign for the presidency in 1828 The two were never particularly close friends Calhoun never fully trusted Jackson a frontiersman and popular war hero but hoped that his election would bring some reprieve from Adams s anti states rights policies 9 Jackson selected Calhoun as his running mate and together they defeated Adams and his running mate Richard Rush 50 Calhoun thus became the second of two vice presidents to serve under two different presidents The only other man who accomplished this feat was George Clinton who served as vice president from 1805 to 1812 under Thomas Jefferson and James Madison 51 During the election Jackson s aide James Alexander Hamilton attempted a rapprochement between Jackson and Crawford whom Jackson resented owing partially to the belief that it was he not Calhoun who had opposed the invasion of Florida Hamilton spoke about this prospect with Governor John Forsyth of Georgia who acted as a mediator between the Jackson campaign and Crawford Forsyth wrote a letter back to Hamilton in which he claimed that Crawford had stated to him that it was Calhoun not Crawford who had supported censuring Jackson for his invasion of Florida Knowing that the letter could destroy the partnership between Jackson and Calhoun Hamilton and fellow Jackson aide William B Lewis allowed it to remain in Hamilton s possession without informing Jackson or the public of its existence 52 Petticoat affair edit Main article Petticoat affair Early in Jackson s administration Calhoun s wife Floride Bonneau Calhoun organized Cabinet wives hence the term petticoats against Peggy Eaton wife of Secretary of War John Eaton and refused to associate with her They alleged that John and Peggy Eaton had engaged in an adulterous affair while she was still legally married to her first husband and that her recent behavior was unladylike The allegations of scandal created an intolerable situation for Jackson The Petticoat affair ended friendly relations between Calhoun and Jackson 53 Jackson sided with the Eatons He and his late wife Rachel Donelson had undergone similar political attacks stemming from their marriage in 1791 The two had married in 1791 not knowing that Rachel s first husband Lewis Robards had failed to finalize the expected divorce Once the divorce was finalized they married legally in 1794 but the episode caused a major controversy and was used against him in the 1828 campaign Jackson saw attacks on Eaton stemming ultimately from the political opposition of Calhoun who had failed to silence his wife s criticisms The Calhouns were widely regarded as the chief instigators 18 54 Jackson who loved to personalize disputes 55 also saw the Petticoat affair as a direct challenge to his authority because it involved lower ranking executive officials and their wives seeming to contest his ability to choose whomever he wanted for his cabinet 56 Secretary of State Martin Van Buren a widower took Jackson s side and defended the Eatons 57 Van Buren was a northerner and a supporter of the 1828 tariff which Calhoun bitterly opposed Calhoun and Van Buren were the main contenders for the vice presidential nomination in the ensuing election and the nominee would then presumably be the party s choice to succeed Jackson 58 That Van Buren sided with the Eatons in addition to disagreements between Jackson and Calhoun on other issues mainly the Nullification Crisis marked him as Calhoun s likely vice presidential successor 59 Some historians including Jackson biographers Richard B Latner and Robert V Remini believe that the hostility towards the Eatons was rooted less in questions of proper behavior than in politics Eaton had been in favor of the Tariff of Abominations He was also politically close to Van Buren Calhoun may have wanted to expel Eaton from the cabinet as a way of boosting his anti tariff agenda and increasing his standing in the Democratic Party Many cabinet members were Southern and could be expected to sympathize with such concerns especially Treasury Secretary Samuel D Ingham who was allied with Calhoun and believed that he not Van Buren should succeed Jackson as president 58 In 1830 reports had emerged accurately stating that Calhoun as Secretary of War had favored censuring Jackson for his 1818 invasion of Florida These infuriated Jackson 60 Eventually Lewis decided to reveal the existence of Forsyth s letter and on April 30 Crawford wrote a second letter this time to Forsyth repeating the charge Forsyth represented him as having previously made Jackson received the letter on May 12 which confirmed his suspicions He claimed that Calhoun had betrayed him 61 Eaton took his revenge on Calhoun For reasons unclear Calhoun asked Eaton to approach Jackson about the possibility of Calhoun publishing his correspondence with Jackson at the time of the Seminole War Eaton did nothing leading Calhoun to believe that Jackson had approved the publication of the letters 62 Calhoun published them in the United States Telegraph a newspaper edited by a Calhoun protege Duff Green 9 This gave the appearance of Calhoun trying to justify himself against a conspiracy to damage him and further enraged the President 62 Finally in the spring of 1831 at the suggestion of Van Buren who like Jackson supported the Eatons Jackson replaced all but one of his Cabinet members thereby limiting Calhoun s influence Van Buren began the process by resigning as Secretary of State facilitating Jackson s removal of others Van Buren thereby grew in favor with Jackson while the rift between the President and Calhoun was widened 63 Later in 1832 Calhoun as vice president cast a tie breaking vote against Jackson s nomination of Van Buren as Minister to Great Britain in a failed attempt to end Van Buren s political career Missouri Senator Thomas Hart Benton a staunch supporter of Jackson then stated that Calhoun had elected a Vice President as Van Buren was able to move past his failed nomination as Minister to Great Britain and instead gain the Democratic Party s vice presidential nomination in the 1832 election in which he and Jackson were victorious 9 Nullification edit See also Nullification U S Constitution and Nullification Crisis Calhoun had begun to oppose increases in protective tariffs as they generally benefited Northerners more than Southerners While he was vice president in the Adams administration Jackson s supporters devised a high tariff legislation that placed duties on imports that were also made in New England Calhoun had been assured that the northeastern interests would reject the Tariff of 1828 exposing pro Adams New England congressmen to charges that they selfishly opposed legislation popular among Jacksonian Democrats in the west and mid Atlantic States The Southern legislators miscalculated and the so called Tariff of Abominations passed and was signed into law by President Adams Frustrated Calhoun returned to his South Carolina plantation where he anonymously composed South Carolina Exposition and Protest an essay rejecting the centralization philosophy and supporting the principle of nullification as a means to prevent a tyranny of a central government 64 Calhoun supported the idea of nullification through a concurrent majority Nullification is a legal theory that a state has the right to nullify or invalidate any federal law it deems unconstitutional In Calhoun s words it is the right of a State to interpose in the last resort in order to arrest an unconstitutional act of the General Government within its limits 65 Nullification can be traced back to arguments by Jefferson and Madison in writing the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions of 1798 against the Alien and Sedition Acts Madison expressed the hope that the states would declare the acts unconstitutional while Jefferson explicitly endorsed nullification 66 Calhoun openly argued for a state s right to secede from the Union as a last resort to protect its liberty and sovereignty In his later years Madison rebuked supporters of nullification stating that no state had the right to nullify federal law 67 In South Carolina Exposition and Protest Calhoun argued that a state could veto any federal law that went beyond the enumerated powers and encroached upon the residual powers of the State 68 President Jackson meanwhile generally supported states rights but opposed nullification and secession At the 1830 Jefferson Day dinner at Jesse Brown s Indian Queen Hotel Jackson proposed a toast and proclaimed Our federal Union it must be preserved 69 Calhoun replied The Union next to our liberty the most dear May we all remember that it can only be preserved by respecting the rights of the states and distributing equally the benefit and burden of the Union 70 Calhoun s publication of letters from the Seminole War in the Telegraph caused his relationship with Jackson to deteriorate further thus contributing to the nullification crisis Jackson and Calhoun began an angry correspondence that lasted until Jackson stopped it in July 9 Jackson supported a revision to tariff rates known as the Tariff of 1832 It was designed to placate the nullifiers by lowering tariff rates Written by Treasury Secretary Louis McLane the bill lowered duties from 45 to 27 In May Representative John Quincy Adams introduced a slightly revised version of the bill which Jackson accepted It passed Congress on July 9 and was signed by the president on July 14 The bill failed to satisfy extremists on either side 71 In October the South Carolina legislature voted to call a convention to nullify the tariffs 72 On November 24 the South Carolina Nullification Convention passed an ordinance nullifying both the Tariff of 1832 and the Tariff of 1828 and threatening to secede if the federal government attempted to enforce the tariffs 73 74 In response Jackson sent U S Navy warships to Charleston harbor and threatened to hang Calhoun or any man who worked to support nullification or secession 75 After joining the Senate Calhoun began to work with Clay on a new compromise tariff A bill sponsored by the administration had been introduced by Representative Gulian C Verplanck of New York but it lowered rates more sharply than Clay and other protectionists desired Clay managed to get Calhoun to agree to a bill with higher rates in exchange for Clay s opposition to Jackson s military threats and perhaps with the hope that he could win some Southern votes in his next bid for the presidency 76 On the same day Congress passed the Force Bill which empowered the President of the United States to use military force to ensure state compliance with federal law South Carolina accepted the tariff but in a final show of defiance nullified the Force Bill 77 In Calhoun s speech against the Force Bill delivered on February 5 1833 no longer as vice president he strongly endorsed nullification at one point saying Why then confer on the President the extensive and unlimited powers provided in this bill Why authorize him to use military force to arrest the civil process of the State But one answer can be given That in a contest between the State and the General Government if the resistance be limited on both sides to the civil process the State by its inherent sovereignty standing upon its reserved powers will prove too powerful in such a controversy and must triumph over the Federal Government sustained by its delegated and limited authority and in this answer we have an acknowledgment of the truth of those great principles for which the State has so firmly and nobly contended 78 In his three volume biography of Jackson James Parton summed up Calhoun s role in the Nullification crisis Calhoun began it Calhoun continued it Calhoun stopped it 79 Resignation edit As tensions over nullification escalated South Carolina Senator Robert Y Hayne was considered less capable than Calhoun to represent South Carolina in the Senate debates so in late 1832 Hayne resigned to become governor Calhoun resigned as vice president and the South Carolina legislature elected Calhoun to fill Hayne s Senate seat Van Buren had already been elected as Jackson s new vice president meaning that Calhoun had less than three months left on his term anyway 80 The South Carolina newspaper City Gazette commented on the change It is admitted that the former gentleman Hayne is injudiciously pitted against Clay and Webster and nullification out of the question Mr Calhoun s place should be in front with these formidable politicians 81 Biographer John Niven argues that these moves were part of a well thought out plan whereby Hayne would restrain the hotheads in the state legislature and Calhoun would defend his brainchild nullification in Washington against administration stalwarts and the likes of Daniel Webster the new apostle of northern nationalism 82 As vice president Calhoun made a record of 31 tie breaking votes in the Senate the most of any vice president in their capacity as Senate president until vice president Kamala Harris surpassed it in 2023 83 84 First term in the U S Senate edit nbsp A portrait of Calhoun from 1834 by Rembrandt PealeWhen Calhoun took his seat in the Senate on December 29 1832 his chances of becoming president were considered poor due to his involvement in the Nullification Crisis which left him without connections to a major national party 9 After the implementation of the Compromise Tariff of 1833 which helped solve the Nullification Crisis the Nullifier Party along with other anti Jackson politicians formed a coalition known as the Whig Party Calhoun sometimes affiliated with the Whigs but chose to remain a virtual independent due to the Whig promotion of federally subsidized internal improvements 85 From 1833 to 1834 Jackson was engaged in removing federal funds from the Second Bank of the United States during the Bank War Calhoun opposed this action considering it a dangerous expansion of executive power 86 He called the men of the Jackson administration artful cunning and corrupt politicians and not fearless warriors 87 He accused Jackson of being ignorant about financial matters As evidence he cited the economic panic caused by Nicholas Biddle as a means to stop Jackson from destroying the Bank 87 On March 28 1834 Calhoun voted with the Whig senators on a successful motion to censure Jackson for his removal of the funds 88 In 1837 he refused to attend the inauguration of Jackson s chosen successor Van Buren even as other powerful senators who opposed the administration such as Webster and Clay did witness the inauguration 89 However by 1837 Calhoun generally had realigned himself with most of the Democrats policies 85 To restore his national stature Calhoun cooperated with Van Buren Democrats were hostile to national banks and the country s bankers had joined the Whig Party The Democratic replacement meant to help combat the Panic of 1837 was the Independent Treasury system which Calhoun supported and which went into effect 90 Calhoun like Jackson and Van Buren attacked finance capitalism and opposed what he saw as encroachment by government and big business For this reason he opposed the candidacy of Whig William Henry Harrison in the 1840 presidential election believing that Harrison would institute high tariffs and therefore place an undue burden on the Southern economy 9 Calhoun resigned from the Senate on March 3 1843 four years before the expiration of his term and returned to Fort Hill to prepare an attempt to win the Democratic nomination for the 1844 presidential election 91 He gained little support even from the South and quit 92 Secretary of State editAppointment and the Annexation of Texas edit Main article Texas annexation When Harrison died in 1841 after a month in office Vice President John Tyler succeeded him Tyler a former Democrat was expelled from the Whig Party after vetoing bills passed by the Whig congressional majority to reestablish a national bank and raise tariffs 93 He named Calhoun Secretary of State on April 10 1844 following the death of Abel P Upshur one of six people killed when a cannon exploded during a public demonstration in the USS Princeton disaster nbsp Calhoun during his tenure as Secretary of State April 1844 March 1845 Upshur s loss was a severe blow to the Tyler administration When Calhoun was nominated as Upshur s replacement the White House was well advanced towards securing a treaty of annexation with Texas The State Department s secret negotiations with the Texas republic had proceeded despite explicit threats from a suspicious Mexican government that an unauthorized seizure of its northern district of Coahuila y Tejas would be equivalent to an act of war 94 Both the negotiations with Texas envoys and the garnering of support from the U S Senate had been spearheaded aggressively by Secretary Upshur a strong pro slavery partisan 95 Tyler looked to its ratification by the Senate as the sine qua non to his ambition for another term in office Tyler planned to outflank the Whigs by gaining support from the Democratic Party or possibly creating a new party of discontented Northern Democrats and Southern Whigs 96 Calhoun though as avid a proponent for Texas acquisition as Upshur posed a political liability to Tyler s aims 97 As secretary of state Calhoun s political objective was to see that the presidency was placed in the hands of a southern extremist who would put the expansion of slavery at the center of national policy 98 Tyler and his allies had since 1843 devised and encouraged national propaganda promoting Texas annexation which understated Southern slaveholders aspirations regarding the future of Texas 95 Instead Tyler chose to portray the annexation of Texas as something that would prove economically beneficial to the nation as a whole The further introduction of slavery into the vast expanses of Texas and beyond they argued would diffuse rather than concentrate slavery regionally ultimately weakening white attachment and dependence on slave labor This theory was yoked to the growing enthusiasm among Americans for Manifest Destiny a desire to see the social economic and moral precepts of republicanism spread across the continent 99 100 Moreover Tyler declared that national security was at stake If foreign powers Great Britain in particular were to gain influence in Texas it would be reduced to a British cotton producing reserve and a base to exert geostrategic influence over North America Texas might be coerced into relinquishing slavery inducing slave uprisings in adjoining slave states and deepening sectional conflicts between American free soil and slave soil interests 101 The appointment of Calhoun with his southern states rights reputation which some believed was synonymous with slavery threatened to cast doubt on Tyler s carefully crafted reputation as a nationalist 102 Tyler though ambivalent felt obliged to enlist Calhoun as Secretary of State because Tyler s closest confidantes had in haste offered the position to the South Carolinian statesman in the immediate aftermath of the Princeton disaster Calhoun would be confirmed by Congress by unanimous vote 103 In advance of Calhoun s arrival in Washington D C Tyler attempted to quickly finalize the treaty negotiations Sam Houston President of the Texas Republic fearing Mexican retaliation insisted on a tangible demonstration of U S commitments to the security of Texas When key Texas diplomats failed to appear on schedule the delay compelled Tyler to bring his new Secretary of State directly into negotiations 102 Secretary Calhoun was directed to honor former Secretary Upshur s verbal assurances of protection 104 now offered by Calhoun in writing to provide for U S military intervention in the event that Mexico used force to hold Texas Tyler deployed U S Navy vessels to the Gulf of Mexico and ordered army units mobilized entirely paid for with 100 000 of executive branch contingency funds The move side stepped constitutional requirements that Congress authorize appropriations for war 102 On April 22 1844 Secretary Calhoun signed the treaty of annexation and ten days later delivered it to the Senate for consideration in secret session 105 The details of the treaty negotiations and supporting documents were leaked to the press by Senator Benjamin Tappan of Ohio Tappan a Democrat was an opponent of annexation and of slavery 106 The terms of the Tyler Texas treaty and the release of Calhoun s letter to British ambassador Richard Pakenham exposed the annexation campaign as a program to expand and preserve slavery In the Pakenham letter Calhoun alleged that the institution of slavery contributed to the physical and mental well being of Southern slaves The U S Senate was compelled to open its debates on ratification to public scrutiny and hopes for its passage by the two thirds majority required by the Constitution were abandoned by administration supporters In linking Texas annexation to the expansion of slavery Calhoun had alienated many who might previously have supported the treaty 107 On June 8 1844 after fierce partisan struggles the Senate rejected the Tyler Texas treaty by a vote of 16 35 a margin of more than two to one 106 The vote went largely along party lines Whigs had opposed it almost unanimously 1 27 while Democrats split but voted largely in favor 15 8 108 Nevertheless the disclosure of the treaty placed the issue of Texas annexation at the center of the 1844 general election 109 110 Election of 1844 edit Main article 1844 United States presidential election nbsp Daguerreotype of Calhoun c 1843At the Democratic Convention in Baltimore Maryland in May 1844 Calhoun s supporters with Calhoun in attendance threatened to bolt the proceedings and shift support to Tyler s third party ticket if the delegates failed to produce a pro Texas nominee 111 Calhoun s Pakenham letter and its identification with proslavery extremism moved the presumptive Democratic Party nominee the northerner Martin Van Buren into denouncing annexation Therefore Van Buren already not widely popular in the South saw his support from that region crippled As a result James K Polk a pro Texas Jacksonian and Tennessee politician won the nomination Historian Daniel Walker Howe says that Calhoun s Pakenham letter was a deliberate attempt to influence the outcome of the 1844 election writing By identifying Texas with slavery Calhoun made sure that Van Buren being a northerner would have to oppose Texas This Calhoun correctly foresaw would hurt the New Yorker s chances for the Democratic nomination Nor did the Carolinian s ingenious strategy ultimately wreck the cause for Texas annexation Indeed in that respect it would turn out a brilliant success 112 In the general election Calhoun offered his endorsement to Polk on condition that he support the annexation of Texas oppose the Tariff of 1842 and dissolve the Washington Globe the semi official propaganda organ of the Democratic Party headed by Francis Preston Blair He received these assurances and enthusiastically supported Polk s candidacy 113 Polk narrowly defeated Henry Clay who opposed annexation 114 Lame duck President Tyler organized a joint House Senate vote on the Texas treaty which passed requiring only a simple majority He signed a bill of annexation on March 1 With President Polk s support the Texas annexation treaty was approved by the Texas Republic in 1845 115 A bill to admit Texas as the 28th state of the Union was signed by Polk on December 29 1845 116 Second term in the Senate editMexican American War and Wilmot Proviso edit nbsp Calhoun photographed by Mathew Brady in 1849 shortly before his deathCalhoun was re elected to the Senate in 1845 following the resignation of Daniel Elliott Huger He soon became vocally opposed to the Mexican American War He believed that it would distort the national character by undermining republicanism in favor of empire and by bringing non white persons into the country 9 When Congress declared war against Mexico on May 13 he abstained from voting on the measure 117 In South Carolina Calhoun received some praise for his principled position but support for the war was high in spite of his opposition 118 Calhoun also vigorously opposed the Wilmot Proviso an 1846 proposal by Pennsylvania Representative David Wilmot to ban slavery in all newly acquired territories 119 The House of Representatives through its Northern majority passed the provision However the Senate never approved the measure 119 120 Oregon boundary dispute edit A major crisis emerged from the persistent Oregon boundary dispute between Great Britain and the United States due to an increasing number of American migrants The territory included most of present day British Columbia Washington Oregon and Idaho American expansionists used the slogan 54 40 or fight in reference to the Northern boundary coordinates of the Oregon territory The parties compromised ending the war threat by splitting the area down the middle at the 49th parallel with the British acquiring British Columbia and the Americans accepting Washington and Oregon Calhoun along with President Polk and Secretary of State James Buchanan continued work on the treaty while he was a senator and it was ratified by a vote of 41 14 on June 18 1846 121 Rejection of the Compromise of 1850 edit The Compromise of 1850 devised by Clay and Stephen A Douglas a first term Democratic senator from Illinois was designed to solve the controversy over the status of slavery in the vast new territories acquired from Mexico Many pro slavery Southerners opposed it as inadequate protection for slavery and Calhoun helped organize the Nashville Convention which would meet in June to discuss possible Southern secession The 67 year old Calhoun had suffered periodic bouts of tuberculosis throughout his life In March 1850 the disease reached a critical stage Weeks from death and too feeble to speak Calhoun wrote a blistering attack on the Compromise that would become his most famous speech On March 4 a friend and disciple Senator James Mason of Virginia read his remarks 122 123 Calhoun affirmed the right of the South to leave the Union in response to what he called Northern subjugation specifically the North s growing opposition to the South s peculiar institution of slavery He warned that the day the balance between the two sections was destroyed would be a day not far removed from disunion anarchy and civil war Calhoun queried how the Union might be preserved in light of subjugation of the weaker party the pro slavery South by the stronger party the anti slavery North He maintained that the responsibility of solving the question lay entirely on the North as the stronger section to allow the Southern minority an equal share in governance and to cease its anti slavery agitation He added If you who represent the stronger portion cannot agree to settle them on the broad principle of justice and duty say so and let the States we both represent agree to separate and part in peace If you are unwilling we should part in peace tell us so and we shall know what to do when you reduce the question to submission or resistance 91 Calhoun died soon afterward and although the Compromise measures did eventually pass Calhoun s ideas about states rights attracted increasing attention across the South Historian William Barney argues that Calhoun s ideas proved appealing to Southerners concerned with preserving slavery Southern radicals known as Fire Eaters pushed the doctrine of states rights to its logical extreme by upholding the constitutional right of the state to secede 124 Death and burial edit nbsp Calhoun s grave at St Philip s Church yard in CharlestonCalhoun died at the Old Brick Capitol boarding house in Washington D C on March 31 1850 of tuberculosis at the age of 68 The last words attributed to him were The South the poor South 125 He was interred at St Philip s Churchyard in Charleston South Carolina During the Civil War a group of Calhoun s friends were concerned about the possible desecration of his grave by Federal troops and during the night removed his coffin to a hiding place under the stairs of the church The next night his coffin was buried in an unmarked grave near the church where it remained until 1871 when it was again exhumed and returned to its original place 126 After Calhoun had died an associate suggested that Senator Thomas Hart Benton give a eulogy in honor of Calhoun on the floor of the Senate Benton a devoted Unionist declined saying He is not dead sir he is not dead There may be no vitality in his body but there is in his doctrines 127 The Clemson University campus in South Carolina occupies the site of Calhoun s Fort Hill plantation which he bequeathed to his wife and daughter They sold it and its 50 slaves to a relative When that owner died Thomas Green Clemson foreclosed the mortgage He later bequeathed the property to the state for use as an agricultural college to be named after him 128 Calhoun s widow Floride died on July 25 1866 and was buried in St Paul s Episcopal Church Cemetery in Pendleton South Carolina near their children but apart from her husband 18 Political philosophy editAgrarian republicanism edit See also Agrarianism Historian Lee H Cheek Jr characterizes Calhoun s American republicanism as within the South Atlantic tradition as opposed to the puritan tradition While the New England based puritan tradition stressed a politically centralized enforcement of moral and religious norms to secure civic virtue the South Atlantic tradition relied on a decentralized moral and religious order based on the idea of subsidiarity or localism Cheek considers the 1798 Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions written by Jefferson and Madison the cornerstone of Calhoun s republicanism Calhoun believed that popular rule is best expressed in local communities that are nearly autonomous while serving as units of a larger society 129 Slavery edit nbsp George Peter Alexander Healy s 1851 painting of Calhoun at City Hall in Charleston South CarolinaCalhoun led the pro slavery faction in the Senate opposing both total abolitionism and attempts such as the Wilmot Proviso to limit the expansion of slavery into the western territories 9 Calhoun s father Patrick Calhoun was a staunch supporter of slavery who taught his son that social standing depended not merely on a commitment to the ideal of popular self government but also on the ownership of a substantial number of slaves Flourishing in a world in which slaveholding was a hallmark of civilization Calhoun saw little reason to question its morality as an adult 130 He believed that slavery instilled in white people a code of honor that fostered civic mindedness From Calhoun s standpoint the expansion of slavery decreased the likelihood for social conflict and postponed the decay of when money would become the only measure of self worth as he believed had happened in New England Calhoun was firmly convinced that slavery was the key to the success of the American dream 131 Whereas other Southern politicians had excused slavery as a necessary evil in a famous speech on the Senate floor on February 6 1837 Calhoun asserted that slavery was a positive good 4 He rooted this claim on three grounds white supremacy paternalism and capitalism All societies Calhoun claimed are ruled by an elite group that enjoys the fruits of the labor of a less exceptional group Senator William Cabell Rives of Virginia had earlier referred to slavery as an evil that might become a lesser evil in some circumstances Calhoun believed that conceded too much to the abolitionists 132 I take higher ground I hold that in the present state of civilization where two races of different origin and distinguished by color and other physical differences as well as intellectual are brought together the relation now existing in the slaveholding States between the two is instead of an evil a good a positive good I may say with truth that in few countries so much is left to the share of the laborer and so little exacted from him or where there is more kind attention paid to him in sickness or infirmities of age Compare his condition with the tenants of the poor houses in the more civilized portions of Europe look at the sick and the old and infirm slave on one hand in the midst of his family and friends under the kind superintending care of his master and mistress and compare it with the forlorn and wretched condition of the pauper in the poorhouse I hold then that there never has yet existed a wealthy and civilized society in which one portion of the community did not in point of fact live on the labor of the other 133 Calhoun s treatment of his own slaves includes an incident in 1831 when his slave Alick ran away when threatened with a severe whipping Calhoun wrote to his second cousin and brother in law asking him to keep a lookout for Alick and if he was taken to have him severely whipped and sent back 134 In a letter to Alick s captor Calhoun wrote I am glad to hear that Alick has been apprehended and am much obliged to you for paying the expense of apprehending him He ran away for no other cause but to avoid a correction for some misconduct and as I am desirous to prevent a repetition I wish you to have him lodged in Jail for one week to be fed on bread and water and to employ some one for me to give him 30 lashes well laid on at the end of the time 135 Calhoun rejected the belief of Southern leaders such as Henry Clay that all Americans could agree on the opinion and feeling that slavery was wrong although they might disagree on the most practicable way to respond to that great wrong Calhoun s constitutional ideas acted as a viable conservative alternative to Northern appeals to democracy majority rule and natural rights 136 As well as providing an intellectual justification of slavery Calhoun played a central role in devising the South s overall political strategy According to historian Ulrich B Phillips Calhoun s devices were manifold to suppress agitation to praise the slaveholding system to promote white Southern prosperity and expansion to procure a Western alliance to frame a fresh plan of government by concurrent majorities to form a Southern bloc to warn the North of the dangers of Southern desperation to appeal for Northern magnanimity as indispensable for the saving of the Union 137 Shortly after delivering his speech against the Compromise of 1850 Calhoun predicted the destruction of the Union over the slavery issue Speaking to Senator Mason he said I fix its probable occurrence within twelve years or three presidential terms You and others of your age will probably live to see it I shall not The mode by which it will be done is not so clear it may be brought about in a manner that no one now foresees But the probability is it will explode in a presidential election 138 Opposition to the War with Mexico edit nbsp Calhoun s home Fort Hill on the grounds that became part of Clemson University in Clemson South CarolinaCalhoun was consistently opposed to the War with Mexico arguing that an enlarged military effort would only feed the alarming and growing lust of the public for empire regardless of its constitutional dangers bloat executive powers and patronage and saddle the republic with a soaring debt that would disrupt finances and encourage speculation Calhoun feared moreover that Southern slave owners would be shut out of any conquered Mexican territories as nearly happened with the Wilmot Proviso He argued that the war would detrimentally lead to the annexation of all of Mexico which would bring Mexicans into the country whom he considered deficient in moral and intellectual terms He said in a speech on January 4 1848 We make a great mistake sir when we suppose that all people are capable of self government We are anxious to force free government on all and I see that it has been urged in a very respectable quarter that it is the mission of this country to spread civil and religious liberty over all the world and especially over this continent It is a great mistake None but people advanced to a very high state of moral and intellectual improvement are capable in a civilized state of maintaining free government and amongst those who are so purified very few indeed have had the good fortune of forming a constitution capable of endurance 139 Calhoun argued that a war for territory was morally wrong and felt that the Polk administration had been too aggressive in trying to force a war 140 Anti slavery Northerners denounced the war as a Southern conspiracy to expand slavery Calhoun in turn perceived a connivance of Yankees to destroy the South By 1847 he decided the Union was threatened by a totally corrupt party system He believed that in their lust for office patronage and spoils politicians in the North pandered to the anti slavery vote especially during presidential campaigns and politicians in the slave states sacrificed Southern rights in an effort to placate the Northern wings of their parties Thus the essential first step in any successful assertion of Southern rights had to be the jettisoning of all party ties In 1848 49 Calhoun tried to give substance to his call for Southern unity He was the driving force behind the drafting and publication of the Address of the Southern Delegates in Congress to Their Constituents 141 It alleged Northern violations of the constitutional rights of the South then warned Southern voters to expect forced emancipation of slaves in the near future followed by their complete subjugation by an unholy alliance of unprincipled Northerners and blacks Whites would flee and the South would become the permanent abode of disorder anarchy poverty misery and wretchedness 142 Only the immediate and unflinching unity of Southern whites could prevent such a disaster Such unity would either bring the North to its senses or lay the foundation for an independent South But the spirit of union was still strong in the region and fewer than 40 of the Southern congressmen signed the address and only one Whig 143 Many Southerners believed his warnings and read every political news story from the North as further evidence of the planned destruction of the white southern way of life The climax came a decade after Calhoun s death with the election of Republican Abraham Lincoln in 1860 which led to the secession of South Carolina followed by six other Southern states They formed the new Confederate States which in accordance with Calhoun s theory did not have any organized political parties 144 Concurrent majority edit nbsp Undated photograph of CalhounCalhoun s basic concern for protecting the diversity of minority interests is expressed in his chief contribution to political science the idea of a concurrent majority across different groups as distinguished from a numerical majority 145 A concurrent majority is a system in which a minority group is permitted to exercise a sort of veto power over actions of a majority that are believed to infringe upon the minority s rights 146 According to the principle of a numerical majority the will of the more numerous citizens should always rule regardless of the burdens on the minority Such a principle tends toward a consolidation of power in which the interests of the absolute majority always prevail over those of the minority Calhoun believed that the great achievement of the American constitution was in checking the tyranny of a numerical majority through institutional procedures that required a concurrent majority such that each important interest must consent to the actions of government To secure a concurrent majority those interests that have a numerical majority must compromise with the interests that are in the minority A concurrent majority requires a unanimous consent of all the major interests in a community which is the only sure way of preventing tyranny of the majority This idea supported Calhoun s doctrine of interposition or nullification in which the state governments could refuse to enforce or comply with a policy of the Federal government that threatened the vital interests of the states 147 Historian Richard Hofstadter 1948 emphasizes that Calhoun s conception of minority was very different from the minorities of a century later Not in the slightest was Calhoun concerned with minority rights as they are chiefly of interest to the modern liberal mind the rights of dissenters to express unorthodox opinions of the individual conscience against the State least of all of ethnic minorities At bottom he was not interested in any minority that was not a propertied minority The concurrent majority itself was a device without relevance to the protection of dissent designed to protect a vested interest of considerable power it was minority privileges rather than minority rights that he really proposed to protect 148 Unlike Jefferson Calhoun rejected attempts at economic social or political leveling claiming that true equality could not be achieved if all classes were given equal rights and responsibilities Rather to ensure true prosperity it was necessary for a stronger group to provide protection and care for the weaker one This meant that the two groups should not be equal before the law For Calhoun protection order was more important than freedom Individual rights were something to be earned not something bestowed by nature or God 127 Calhoun was concerned with protecting the interests of the Southern States which he identified with the interests of their slaveholding elites as a distinct and beleaguered minority among the members of the federal Union his idea of a concurrent majority as a protection for minority rights has gained some acceptance in American political thought 149 150 Political scientist Malcolm Jewell argues The decision making process in this country resembles John Calhoun s concurrent majority A large number of groups both within and outside the government must in practice approve any major policy 151 Calhoun s ideas on the concurrent majority are illustrated in A Disquisition on Government The Disquisition is a 100 page essay on Calhoun s definitive and comprehensive ideas on government which he worked on intermittently for six years until its 1849 completion 152 It systematically presents his arguments that a numerical majority in any government will typically impose a despotism over a minority unless some way is devised to secure the assent of all classes sections and interests and similarly that innate human depravity would debase government in a democracy 153 State sovereignty and the Calhoun Doctrine edit In the 1840s three interpretations of the constitutional powers of Congress to deal with slavery in territories emerged the free soil doctrine the popular sovereignty position and the Calhoun doctrine The Free Soilers stated that Congress had the power to outlaw slavery in the territories The popular sovereignty position argued that the voters living there should decide The Calhoun doctrine said that neither Congress nor the citizens of the territories could outlaw slavery in the territories 154 In what historian Robert R Russell calls the Calhoun Doctrine Calhoun argued that the Federal Government s role in the territories was only that of the trustee or agent of the several sovereign states it was obliged not to discriminate among the states and hence was incapable of forbidding the bringing into any territory of anything that was legal property in any state Calhoun argued that citizens from every state had the right to take their property to any territory Congress and local voters he asserted had no authority to place restrictions on slavery in the territories 155 In a February 1847 speech before the Senate Calhoun declared that the enactment of any law which should directly or by its effects deprive the citizens of any of the States of this Union from emigrating with their property in to any of the territories of the United States will make such discrimination and would therefore be a violation of the Constitution Enslavers therefore had a fundamental right to take their property wherever they wished 156 As constitutional historian Hermann von Holst noted Calhoun s doctrine made it a solemn constitutional duty of the United States government and of the American people to act as if the existence or non existence of slavery in the Territories did not concern them in the least 157 The Calhoun Doctrine was opposed by the Free Soil forces which merged into the new Republican Party around 1854 158 Chief Justice Roger B Taney used Calhoun s arguments in his decision in the 1857 Supreme Court case Dred Scott v Sandford in which he ruled that the federal government could not prohibit slavery in any of the territories Legacy edit nbsp John C Calhoun postage stamp CSA issue of 1862 unused nbsp Confederate First issue banknote depicting both Calhoun and Andrew Jackson Act of March 9 1861 Monuments and memorials edit See also List of places named for John C Calhoun Many different places streets and schools were named after Calhoun as may be seen on the list linked above Some such as Springfield Illinois 1832 159 and Jackson County Kansas 1859 were subsequently renamed The Immortal Trio Calhoun Daniel Webster and Henry Clay were memorialized with streets in Uptown New Orleans In June 2020 Clemson University removed John C Calhoun s name from Clemson University Calhoun Honors College renaming it to Clemson University Honors College This action was taken in response to a petition which was supported by NFL stars DeAndre Hopkins and Deshaun Watson who are Clemson University alumni 160 Against the backdrop of the George Floyd protests 161 University chairman Smyth McKissick said that we must recognize there are central figures in Clemson s history whose ideals beliefs and actions do not represent the university s core values of respect and diversity 160 The Confederate government honored Calhoun on a 1 postage stamp which was printed in 1862 but was never officially released 162 In 1887 at the height of the Jim Crow era white segregationists erected a monument to Calhoun in Marion Square in Charleston South Carolina the base was within easy reach and the local black population defaced it Finally it was replaced in 1896 standing atop a column base at a total of 115 feet 163 as well as fenced in to deter attackers It continued as a target of vandalism regardless 164 165 The statue has been a topic of debate for a long time In 2017 Charleston s city council deferred a proposal to put a plaque on the statue that would have stated his white supremacist views 166 It was No 5 on the Make It Right Project s 2018 list of the 10 Confederate monuments it most wanted removed 167 The Make It Right Project organized a protest at the monument on May 16 2019 168 The monument was removed on June 24 2020 169 following a unanimous vote by the Charleston City Council to relocate the monument 170 nbsp John C Calhoun statue in National Statuary Hall Collection at the U S CapitolIn 1910 the state of South Carolina gave a statue of Calhoun to the National Statuary Hall Collection in the United States Capitol 171 Also in the Capitol there is an 1896 bust of Calhoun in the U S Senate Vice Presidential Bust Collection and he is one of the Famous Five former members originally selected by the Senate in 1957 to be honored with a portrait in Senate Reception Room 172 173 In 1817 surveyors sent by Secretary of War Calhoun to map the area around Fort Snelling named the largest lake in what became Minneapolis Minnesota for him 174 Two centuries later the city of Minneapolis renamed the lake with the Dakota language name Bde Maka Ska meaning White Earth Lake or White Banks Lake 175 The Calhoun Isles Community Band in the Uptown district of Minneapolis changed its name to City of Lakes Community Band in November 2018 to distance itself from Calhoun s pro slavery legacy following the renaming of the lake 176 Calhoun Square and Calhoun Beach Club both in Minneapolis announced name changes and the road around the lake was renamed Bde Maka Ska Parkway 177 In 2022 the city councilors of Savannah Georgia voted unanimously to remove his name from Calhoun Square 178 Film and television edit Calhoun was portrayed by actor Arliss Howard in the 1997 film Amistad The film depicts the controversy and legal battle surrounding the status of slaves who in 1839 rebelled against their transporters on the La Amistad slave ship 179 Historical reputation edit Calhoun was despised by Jackson and his supporters for his alleged attempts to subvert the unity of the nation for his own political gain On his deathbed Jackson regretted that he had not had Calhoun executed for treason My country he declared would have sustained me in the act and his fate would have been a warning to traitors in all time to come 79 Even after his death Calhoun s reputation among Jacksonians remained poor They disparaged him by portraying him as a man thirsty for power who when he failed to attain it sought to tear down his country with him According to Parton writing in 1860 The old Jackson men of the inner set still speak of Mr Calhoun in terms which show that they consider him at once the most wicked and the most despicable of American statesmen He was a coward conspirator hypocrite traitor and fool say they He strove schemed dreamed lived only for the presidency and when he despaired of reaching that office through honorable means he sought to rise upon the ruins of his country thinking it better to reign in South Carolina than to serve in the United States General Jackson lived and died in this opinion 79 Writing more than thirty years after Calhoun s death James G Blaine portrayed him as a mix of personal integrity and wrongheaded ideology Deplorable as was the end to which his teachings led he could not have acquired the influence he wielded over millions of men unless he had been gifted with acute intellect distinguished by moral excellence and inspired by the sincerest belief in the righteousness of his cause History will adjudge him to have been single hearted and honest in his political creed It will equally adjudge him to have been wrong in his theory of the Federal Government and dead to the awakened sentiment of Christendom in his views concerning the enslavement of man 180 Calhoun is often remembered for his defense of minority rights in the context of defending white Southern interests from perceived Northern threats by use of the concurrent majority He is also noted and criticized for his strong defense of slavery These positions played an enormous role in influencing Southern secessionist leaders by strengthening the trend of sectionalism thus contributing to the Civil War 127 External videos nbsp Booknotes interview with Irving Bartlett on John C Calhoun A Biography August 16 1994 C SPANBiographer Irving Bartlett wrote Posterity decided against Calhoun s argument for the indefinite protection of slavery more than 130 years ago What he had to say about the need in popular governments like our own to protect the rights of minorities about the importance of choosing leaders with character talent and the willingness to speak hard truths to the people and about the enduring need in a vast and various country like our own for the people themselves to develop and sustain both the civic culture and the institutional structures which contribute to their lasting interest is as fresh and significant today as it was in 1850 181 Calhoun has been held in regard by some Lost Cause of the Confederacy historians who hold a romanticized view of the antebellum Southern way of life and its cause during the Civil War Historians such as Charles M Wiltse and Margaret Coit have in their writings portrayed Calhoun as a sympathetic or heroic figure 182 183 John Niven paints a portrait of Calhoun that is both sympathetic and tragic He says that Calhoun s ambition and personal desires were often thwarted by lesser men than he Niven identifies Calhoun as a driven man and a tragic figure He argues that Calhoun was motivated by the near disaster of the War of 1812 of which he was a thoughtless advocate to work towards fighting for the freedoms and securities of the white Southern people against any kind of threat Ultimately Niven says he would overcompensate and in the end would more than any other individual destroy the culture he sought to preserve perpetuating for several generations the very insecurity that had shaped his public career 184 In 1957 a five member special committee led by Senator John F Kennedy selected Calhoun as one of the five senators to enter the newly created senatorial pantheon hall of fame This hall of fame was established to fill five vacant portrait spaces in the Senate Reception Room 185 186 187 Recently Calhoun s reputation has suffered particularly due to his defense of slavery 183 The racially motivated Charleston church shooting in South Carolina in June 2015 reinvigorated demands for the removal of monuments dedicated to prominent pro slavery and Confederate States figures That month the monument to Calhoun in Charleston was found vandalized with spray painted denunciations of Calhoun as a racist and a defender of slavery 188 Later in 2020 during the George Floyd protests in South Carolina the monument was vandalized with signs and spray paint with calls from the public demanding its removal causing the city of Charleston to erect a chain link fence around the statue to prevent the public from accessing it before announcing on June 23 2020 that the statue would be removed 189 In response to decades of requests Yale President Peter Salovey announced in 2017 that the university s Calhoun College would be renamed to honor Grace Hopper a pioneering computer programmer mathematician and Navy rear admiral who graduated from Yale 190 Calhoun is commemorated elsewhere on the campus including the exterior of Harkness Tower a prominent campus landmark as one of Yale s Eight Worthies 191 See also editList of places named for John C Calhoun List of United States Congress members who died in office 1790 1899 USS John C CalhounReferences edit Calhoun John C Oxford Dictionaries Archived from the original on July 1 2016 Retrieved May 29 2016 Coit 1950 pp 70 71 Miller 1996 pp 115 116 a b Wilson Clyde N June 26 2014 John C Calhoun and Slavery as a Positive Good What He Said The Abbeville Institute Retrieved June 6 2016 Coit 1950 p 3 Niven 1988 pp 6 8 Wiltse 1944 pp 15 24 Niven 1988 p 10 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p John C Calhoun 7th Vice President 1825 1832 United States Senate Retrieved May 7 2016 Niven 1988 p 18 Capers 1960 pp 1 2 Calhoun amp Post 1995 p xii Douglas 2009 p 368 Wiltse 1944 pp 25 39 Coit 1950 p 42 Her branch of the family spelled the surname differently from his See A S Salley The Calhoun Family of South Carolina Columbia SC 1906 p 19 The name appears in various records as Colhoon Cohoon Calhoun Cahoun Cohoun Calhoon and Colhoun Ibid pp 1 2 5 6 18 19 In Scotland it is spelled Colquhoun Ellen R Johnson Colquhoun Calhoun and Their Ancestral Homelands Heritage Books 1993 passim a b c d e f John C Calhoun clemson edu Retrieved October 17 2022 a b c d e Floride Bonneau Colhoun Calhoun Clemson University Archived from the original on March 8 2016 Retrieved March 17 2016 Anna Maria Calhoun Clemson Clemson University Archived from the original on May 16 2016 Retrieved May 14 2016 Coit 1950 pp 27 28 Calhoun 2003 p 254 Niven 1988 p 26 All Souls History and Archives All Souls Church Unitarian Archived from the original on May 10 2016 Retrieved May 30 2016 Peterson 1988 p 27 Perkins 1961 p 359 War Report of 1812 Papers of John C Calhoun 1 110 Stagg 2012 pp 117 161 Langguth 2006 pp 375 387 Wiltse 1944 pp 103 105 Phillips 1929 3 412 414 Jewett 1908 p 143 Meigs 1917 Vol 1 p 221 Meigs 1917 Vol 2 p 8 Peterson 1988 pp 280 408 Hofstadter 2011 p 96 Kirk 2001 p 168 von Holst 1883 p 54 Wiltse 1944 p 234 Niven 1988 p 54 Belko 2004 pp 170 197 Satz 1974 pp 2 7 Prucha 1997 p 155 Remini 1977 p 366 Remini 1977 pp 358 359 Baptist 2014 pp 154 156 7 Toward a Professional Army United States Army Archived from the original on July 27 2016 Retrieved August 11 2016 Hogan Margaret A John Quincy Adams Campaigns and Elections University of Virginia Miller Center Retrieved January 3 2016 U S Electoral College Historical Election Results National Archives and Records Administration Retrieved January 31 2017 Roesch James Rutledge August 25 2015 John C Calhoun and State s Rights The Abbeville Review Retrieved April 26 2016 John Quincy Adams Campaigns and Elections University of Virginia Miller Center Retrieved August 4 2016 Vice President of the United States President of the Senate The Individuals United States Senate Retrieved May 1 2016 Remini 1981 p 241 Marszalek 2000 p 84 Rachel Jackson The Hermitage Archived from the original on August 17 2016 Retrieved August 17 2016 Remini 1981 pp 14 15 Bates 2015 p 315 McKellar 1942 p 151 a b Remini 1981 p 243 Howe 2007 pp 337 339 Cheathem 2008 p 29 Remini 1981 pp 242 243 a b Remini 1981 pp 306 307 Marszalek 2000 p 121 Niven 1988 pp 158 161 Cralle 1888 p 96 Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions 1798 Bill of Rights Institute Retrieved January 6 2016 Rutland 1997 pp 248 249 Calhoun 1992 pp 348 349 Niven 1988 p 173 Brands 2005 p 446 Remini 1981 pp 358 360 Howe 2007 p 402 South Carolina Ordinance of Nullification November 24 1832 The Avalon Project Archived from the original on August 19 2016 Retrieved August 22 2016 Howe 2007 p 405 Howe 2007 pp 404 406 Remini 1981 p 38 Howe 2007 pp 406 410 Calhoun John C John C Calhoun Against the Force Bill University of Missouri Archived from the original on June 24 2016 Retrieved May 17 2016 a b c Parton 1860 p 447 Phillips 1929 pp 411 419 Jervey 1909 p 315 Niven 1988 p 192 Senate gov VPTies pdf PDF Retrieved April 3 2017 Vice President Harris breaks record for casting the most tie breaking votes NBC News December 5 2023 Retrieved December 5 2023 a b Ashworth 1995 p 203 Wilentz 2006 p 397 a b Niven 1988 p 42 Senate Reverses a Presidential Censure United States Senate Retrieved August 20 2017 Remini 1984 p 422 Niven 1988 pp 62 63 a b John C Calhoun Clemson University Archived from the original on February 15 2017 Retrieved January 9 2016 James K Polk Campaigns and Elections The Campaign and Election of 1844 University of Virginia Miller Center Retrieved May 4 2016 John Tyler Domestic Affairs University of Virginia Miller Center Retrieved June 2 2016 May 2008 p 105 a b Howe 2007 p 677 May 2008 p 100 Holt 2004 p 35 Howe 2007 pp 680 681 May 2008 pp 99 101 Varon 2008 p 184 May 2008 pp 97 98 a b c May 2008 p 110 May 2008 p 109 Howe 2007 p 679 Howe 2007 pp 679 680 a b Howe 2007 p 680 May 2008 p 113 May 2008 pp 114 115 May 2008 p 115 Varon 2008 p 167 Howe 2007 p 683 Howe 2007 pp 681 682 Merry 2009 pp 104 107 Remini 1984 pp 497 507 Borneman 2009 pp 79 84 Merk 1978 p 308 Byrnes 2001 p 29 Coit 1950 pp 442 443 a b Niven 1988 pp 305 310 Howe 2007 p 767 The Oregon Territory 1846 United States Department of State Retrieved March 3 2016 Niven 1988 pp 2 3 Today in History March 18 1782 John C Calhoun Library of Congress Retrieved March 27 2016 Barney 2011 p 304 Congress United States March 11 1940 Extension of Remarks of John H Bankhead 2nd Proceedings and Debates of the 76th Congress Third Session V 46 Part 14 Appendix Congressional Record p 1318 Retrieved September 22 2019 Calhoun s Moving Grave Charleston Footprints January 7 2014 Retrieved March 17 2016 a b c Rafuse Ethan S June 12 2006 John C Calhoun He Started the Civil War Historynet Retrieved May 1 2016 Fort Hill History Clemson University Retrieved May 5 2016 Cheek 2004 p 8 Bartlett 1994 p 218 Bartlett 1994 p 228 Bartlett 1994 p 227 Calhoun 1837 p 34 Letter to James Edward Calhoun August 27 1831 Correspondence of John C Calhoun Historical Manuscripts Commission 1899 p 301 Letter to Armistead Burt of September 1 1831 Correspondence of John C Calhoun Historical Manuscripts Commission 1899 pp 301 02 Ford 1988 pp 405 424 Phillips 1929 p 416 Niven 1988 p 1 Calhoun 1999 p 68 Coit 1950 pp 339 441 Durham 2008 p 104 Calhoun 1870 p 311 Bartlett 1994 Perman 2012 p 11 Ford 1994 pp 19 58 Cheek 2004 p 146 Kirk Russell March 17 2015 John C Calhoun Vindicated The Abbeville Institute Retrieved May 18 2016 Hofstadter 2011 pp 90 91 Baskin 1969 pp 49 65 Kateb 1969 pp 583 605 Jewell 2015 p 2 Bartlett 1994 pp 351 355 Freehling 1965 pp 25 42 Fehrenbacher 1981 pp 64 65 Russell 1966 pp 466 486 Baptist 2014 p 331 von Holst 1883 p 312 Foner 1995 p 178 Springfield history Retrieved on February 21 2007 a b Brito Christopher June 12 2020 Clemson removes John C Calhoun s name from honors college CBS News Retrieved June 13 2020 Connolly Matt June 12 2020 Clemson s Calhoun Honors College has a new name after pushback The State Archived from the original on June 12 2020 Retrieved June 12 2020 Kaufmann Patricia A Calhoun Legacy American Stamp Dealer Retrieved May 1 2016 Calhoun Monument Charleston Museum Retrieved January 12 2022 Roberts Blain Kytle Ethan J September 6 2018 The South Carolina Monument That Symbolizes Clashing Memories of Slavery What It Means to Be American Retrieved August 16 2021 Marion Square National Park Service Retrieved June 20 2016 Activist Group calls for removal of John C Calhoun Statue through demonstration WCSC TV Live5WCSC May 16 2019 Holloway Kali June 3 2018 Announcing the Launch of the Make It Right Project Independent Media Institute Retrieved September 10 2018 Mosso Kate May 16 2019 Downtown Charleston protest over statue of slave owner former Vice President gets heated WCIV ABCNews4 Nuyen Suzanne June 24 2020 Crews Begin Removal Of John C Calhoun Statue In South Carolina NPR org Retrieved June 24 2020 Nuyen Suzanne June 24 2020 Crews Begin Removing John C Calhoun Statue In South Carolina NPR Retrieved January 12 2022 John Caldwell Calhoun Architect of the Capitol Retrieved March 23 2022 John C Calhoun United States Senate Retrieved October 21 2023 The Famous Five United States Senate Retrieved October 21 2023 Johnson Frederick L 2009 Richfield Minnesota s Oldest Suburb Richfield Minnesota Richfield Historical Society Press p 2 ISBN 978 1 60585 636 0 Federal government now recognizes Minneapolis lake as Bde Maka Ska MPR News Minnesota Public Radio July 15 2018 Thomas Dylan November 29 2018 Community band latest to drop Calhoun name Southwest Journal Retrieved December 2 2018 Turtinen Melissa June 26 2020 Calhoun Beach Club changing its name to something to be announced later Bring Me The News Maven and Park Board votes to change name of Calhoun Parkway to Bde Maka Ska Parkway KSTP TV Hubbard Broadcasting August 22 2019 Archived from the original on June 29 2020 Retrieved June 26 2020 Peebles Will Savannah City Council votes unanimously to remove the name of Calhoun Square Savannah Morning News Retrieved November 10 2022 Stephen Spielberg s Amistad 1997 University of Missouri Kansas City Retrieved June 18 2016 Blaine James Gillespie Twenty Years of Congress Vol 1 Ch V Bartlett 1994 p 7 Klingenberg Mitchell G Bartlett Texas Christian University Retrieved January 22 2017 a b Wilson Clyde March 16 2015 John C Calhoun A Statesman for the 21st Century The Abbeville Institute Niven 1988 pp 5 6 Five Outstanding Senators from the Past Named Panel picks Calhoun Taft Webster Clay and La Follette The New York Times May 1 1957 The Famous Five United States Senate March 12 1959 Retrieved July 23 2020 The Famous Five Now the Famous Nine United States Senate Retrieved July 23 2020 John C Calhoun statue vandalized in downtown Charleston WHNS June 23 2015 Archived from the original on April 4 2016 Retrieved May 11 2016 Aaro David June 24 2020 Crews in South Carolina begin process to remove John C Calhoun statue Fox News Retrieved June 24 2020 Remnick Noah February 11 2017 Yale Will Drop John Calhoun s Name From Building The New York Times Retrieved February 13 2017 Bass Carole March 19 2014 What s in a name Looking for answers at Calhoun College Yale Alumni MagazineBibliography editBiographies edit Bartlett Irving 1994 John C Calhoun A Biography New York W W Norton Inc ISBN 978 0 393 33286 5 Coit Margaret L 1950 John C Calhoun American Portrait Boston Houghton Mifflin ISBN 0 87797 185 4 popular biography von Holst Hermann E 1883 John C Calhoun Boston Houghton Mifflin and Company outdated Meigs William Montgomery 1917 The Life of John Caldwell Calhoun Washington D C Neale Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 7950 0918 1 Niven John 1988 John C Calhoun and the Price of Union A Biography Baton Rouge LSU Press ISBN 978 0 8071 1858 0 Wiltse Charles M 1944 John C Calhoun Nationalist 1782 1828 Indianapolis Bobbs Merrill Company ISBN 0 8462 1041 X John Caldwell Calhoun Dictionary of American Biography 1936 onlineSpecialized studies edit Ashworth John 1995 Slavery Capitalism and Politics in the Antebellum Republic Volume 1 Commerce and Compromise 1820 1850 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 47487 0 Baptist Edward E 2014 The Half has Never Been Told Slavery and the Making of American Capitalism New York Basic Books ISBN 978 04650 0296 2 Barney William L 2011 The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Civil War Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 978201 7 Baskin Darryl 1969 The Pluralist Vision of John C Calhoun Polity 2 1 49 65 doi 10 2307 3234088 JSTOR 3234088 S2CID 147534167 Bates Christopher G 2015 The Early Republic and Antebellum America An Encyclopedia of Social Political Cultural and Economic History Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 45740 4 Belko William S 2004 John C Calhoun and the Creation of the Bureau of Indian Affairs An Essay on Political Rivalry Ideology and Policymaking in the Early Republic South Carolina Historical Magazine 105 3 170 197 JSTOR 27570693 Borneman Walter R 2009 Polk The Man Who Transformed the Presidency and America New York Random House ISBN 978 1 58836 772 3 Brands H W 2005 Andrew Jackson His Life and Times New York Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group ISBN 1 4000 3072 2 Byrnes Mark E 2001 James K Polk A Biographical Companion New York NY Bloomsbury Publishing USA ISBN 978 1 57607 535 7 Capers Gerald M 1960 John C Calhoun Opportunist A Reappraisal Vol 14 Gainesville University of Florida Press Archived from the original on June 10 2012 Retrieved September 1 2017 Cheathem Mark Renfred 2008 Jacksonian and Antebellum Age People and Perspectives Santa Barbara CA ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 59884 017 9 Cheek H Lee 2004 Calhoun and Popular Rule The Political Theory of the Disquisition and Discourse Columbia MO University of Missouri Press ISBN 978 0 8262 1548 2 Cralle R K ed 1888 Report Prepared for the Committee on Federal Relations of the Legislature of South Carolina at its Session in November 1831 The Works of John C Calhoun Vol VI D Appleton Douglas Bradburn 2009 The Citizenship Revolution Politics and the Creation of the American Union 1774 1804 Charlottesville University of Virginia Press ISBN 978 0 8139 3031 2 Durham David I 2008 A Southern Moderate in Radical Times Henry Washington Hilliard 1808 1892 Baton Rouge LSU Press ISBN 978 0 8071 3422 1 Ellis James H 2009 A Ruinous and Unhappy War New England and the War of 1812 New York Algora Publishing ISBN 978 0 87586 691 8 Fehrenbacher Don Edward 1981 Slavery Law and Politics The Dred Scott Case in Historical Perspective Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 502883 6 Foner Eric 1995 Free Soil Free Labor Free Men The Ideology of the Republican Party before the Civil War With a new Introductory Essay Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 509497 8 Ford Lacy K Jr 1988 Republican Ideology in a Slave Society The Political Economy of John C Calhoun Journal of Southern History 54 3 405 424 doi 10 2307 2208996 JSTOR 2208996 Ford Lacy K Jr 1994 Inventing the Concurrent Majority Madison Calhoun and the Problem of Majoritarianism in American Political Thought Journal of Southern History 60 1 19 58 doi 10 2307 2210719 JSTOR 2210719 Freehling William W 1965 Spoilsmen and Interests in the Thought and Career of John C Calhoun Journal of American History 52 1 25 42 doi 10 2307 1901122 JSTOR 1901122 Hofstadter Richard 2011 John C Calhoun The Marx of the Master Class The American Political Tradition And the Men Who Made it New York Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 307 80966 7 Holt Michael F 2004 The Fate of Their Country Politicians Slavery Extension and the Coming of the Civil War New York Hill and Wang ISBN 978 0 8090 9518 6 Howe Daniel Walker 2007 What Hath God Wrought the Transformation of America 1815 1848 Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 507894 7 Jervey Theodore Dehon 1909 Robert Y Hayne and His Times New York The MacMillan Company ISBN 978 0 7222 4580 4 Jewell Malcolm E 2015 Senatorial Politics and Foreign Policy Lexington University Press of Kentucky ISBN 978 0 8131 6340 6 Jewett James C 1908 The United States Congress of 1817 and Some of its Celebrities The William and Mary Quarterly 17 2 139 145 doi 10 2307 1916057 ISSN 0043 5597 JSTOR 1916057 Kateb George 1969 The Majority Principle Calhoun and His Antecedents Political Science Quarterly 84 4 583 605 doi 10 2307 2147126 JSTOR 2147126 Kirk Russell 2001 The Conservative Mind From Burke to Eliot Washington D C Regnery Publishing ISBN 978 0 89526 171 7 Langguth A J 2006 Union 1812 The Americans who Fought the Second War of Independence New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 7432 2618 9 May Gary 2008 John Tyler New York Henry Holt and Company ISBN 978 0 8050 8238 8 Marszalek John F 2000 1997 The Petticoat Affair Manners Mutiny and Sex in Andrew Jackson s White House Baton Rouge LSU Press ISBN 978 0 8071 5578 3 McKellar Kenneth 1942 Tennessee Senators as Seen by One of their Successors Kingsport TN Southern Publishers Inc Merk Frederick 1978 History of the Westward Movement New York Alfred A Knopf Inc ISBN 978 0 7432 9743 1 Merry Robert W 2009 A Country of Vast Designs James K Polk the Mexican War and the Conquest of the American Continent New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 7432 9743 1 Miller William Lee 1996 Arguing About Slavery John Quincy Adams and the Great Battle in the United States Congress New York Vintage Books ISBN 0 394 56922 9 Parton James 1860 Life of Andrew Jackson Volume 3 New York Mason Brothers OCLC 3897681 Perkins Bradford 1961 Prologue to War England and the United States 1805 1812 Oakland University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 00996 7 Perman Michael 2012 The Southern Political Tradition LSU Press ISBN 978 0 8071 4468 8 Peterson Merrill D 1988 Great Triumvirate Webster Clay and Calhoun Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 505686 8 Phillips Ulrich Bonnell 1929 Calhoun John Caldwell 1782 1850 Dictionary of American Biography Vol 3 Scribner pp 411 419 Prucha Francis Paul 1997 American Indian Treaties The History of a Political Anomaly Oakland California University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 91916 7 Remini Robert V 1977 Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Empire 1767 1821 New York Harper amp Row Publishers Inc ISBN 0 8018 5912 3 Remini Robert V 1981 Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Freedom 1822 1832 New York Harper amp Row Publishers Inc ISBN 978 0 8018 5913 7 Remini Robert V 1984 Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Democracy 1833 1845 New York Harper amp Row Publishers Inc ISBN 978 0 8018 5913 7 Rosen Jeffrey 2007 The Supreme Court The Personalities and Rivalries That Defined America New York Henry Holt and Company ISBN 978 1 4299 0461 2 Russell Robert R 1966 Constitutional Doctrines with Regard to Slavery in Territories Journal of Southern History 32 4 466 486 doi 10 2307 2204926 JSTOR 2204926 Rutland Robert Allen 1997 James Madison The Founding Father Columbia University of Missouri Press ISBN 978 0 8262 1141 5 Satz Ronald N 1974 American Indian Policy in the Jacksonian Era Norman University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0 8061 3432 1 Stagg J C A 2012 The War of 1812 Conflict for a Continent Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 89820 1 Varon Elizabeth R 2008 Disunion The Coming of the American Civil War 1789 1859 Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 8718 9 Wilentz Sean 2006 The Rise of American Democracy Jefferson to Lincoln New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 0 393 05820 4 Primary sources edit Calhoun John Caldwell 1837 Speeches of Mr Calhoun of S Carolina on the Bill for the Admission of Michigan Delivered in the Senate of the United States January 1837 Calhoun John C 1870 Cralle Richard K ed The Works of John C Calhoun Reports and public letters New York D Appleton amp Company Calhoun John C 1992 Lence Ross M ed Union and Liberty The Political Philosophy of John C Calhoun Indianapolis Liberty Fund ISBN 0 86597 102 1 Calhoun John C 2017 Beck Juergen ed The Works of John C Calhoun Volume 1 Jazzybee Verlag ISBN 978 3 84967 688 9 Calhoun John C 2017 Beck Juergen ed The Works of John C Calhoun Volume 2 Jazzybee Verlag ISBN 978 3 84967 689 6 Calhoun John Caldwell Post Charles Gordon 1995 A Disquisition on Government and Selections from the Discourse Indianapolis Hackett Publishing ISBN 0 87220 293 3 Calhoun John C 1999 Wilson Clyde N ed The Papers of John C Calhoun vol 25 Columbia University of South Carolina Press ISBN 978 1 57003 306 3 Calhoun John C 2003 Wilson Clyde N ed The Papers of John C Calhoun vol 27 Columbia University of South Carolina Press Calhoun John C 2003 Cheek Lee H ed John C Calhoun Selected Writings and Speeches Washington D C Regnery Publishing ISBN 0 89526 179 0 Further reading editBoucher Chauncey S Brooks Robert P eds 1931 Correspondence Addressed to John C Calhoun 1837 1849 Annual Report of the American Historical Association 1929 Brown Guy Story 2000 Calhoun s Philosophy of Politics A Study ofA Disquisition on Government Mercer GA Mercer University Press Calhoun John C February 6 1837 Slavery a Positive Good Speech United States Senate Capers Gerald M 1948 A Reconsideration of Calhoun s Transition from Nationalism to Nullification Journal of Southern History 14 1 34 48 doi 10 2307 2197709 JSTOR 2197709 Coit Margaret L ed 1970 John C Calhoun Great Lives Observed Upper Saddle River NJ Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 13 112409 7 Excerpts from scholars Current Richard N 1966 John C Calhoun New York Simon amp Schuster Fitzgerald Michael S 1996 Rejecting Calhoun s Expansible Army Plan the Army Reduction Act of 1821 War in History 3 2 161 185 doi 10 1177 096834459600300202 S2CID 111159741 Ford Lacy K 1988 Recovering the republic Calhoun South Carolina and the concurrent majority South Carolina Historical Magazine 89 3 146 159 JSTOR 27568041 Grove John G 2014 Binding the Republic Together The Early Political Thought of John C Calhoun South Carolina Historical Magazine 115 2 100 121 Gutzman Kevin 2002 Paul to Jeremiah Calhoun s Abandonment of Nationalism The Journal of Libertarian Studies 16 3 33 Kytle Ethan J Roberts Blain 2018 Denmark Vesey s Garden Slavery and Memory in the Cradle of the Confederacy New York The New Press ISBN 978 1 62097 365 3 Jarvis Douglas Edward 2013 The Southern Conservative Thought of John C Calhoun and the Cultural Foundations of the Canadian Identity American Review of Canadian Studies 43 3 297 314 doi 10 1080 02722011 2013 819584 S2CID 144819256 Krannawitter Thomas L 2008 Vindicating Lincoln Defending the Politics of Our Greatest President Lanham MS Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers ISBN 978 0 7425 5972 1 Kuic V 1983 John C Calhoun s Theory of the Concurrent Majority American Bar Association Journal 69 482 Lerner Ralph 1963 Calhoun s New Science of Politics American Political Science Review 57 4 918 932 doi 10 2307 1952609 JSTOR 1952609 S2CID 145581750 McBride Fred 1997 Strange Bedfellows The Political Thought of John C Calhoun and Lani Guinier Journal of Black Political Research Merriam Charles E 1902 The Political Theory of Calhoun American Journal of Sociology 7 5 577 594 doi 10 1086 211084 JSTOR 2762212 S2CID 143813301 Polin Constance Polin Raymond 2006 Foundations of American Political Thought Switzerland Peter Lang ISBN 978 0 8204 7929 3 Preyer Norris W 1959 Southern Support of the Tariff of 1816 a Reappraisal Journal of Southern History 25 3 306 322 doi 10 2307 2954765 JSTOR 2954765 Rayback Joseph G 1948 The Presidential Ambitions of John C Calhoun 1844 1848 Journal of Southern History XIV 3 331 356 doi 10 2307 2197879 JSTOR 2197879 Read James H 2009 Majority rule versus consensus the political thought of John C Calhoun Lawrence KS University Press of Kansas Smith Henry Augustus Middleton 1911 Calhoun John Caldwell In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 5 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 1 3 Vajda Zoltan 2001 John C Calhoun s Republicanism Revisited Rhetoric amp Public Affairs 4 3 433 457 doi 10 1353 rap 2001 0056 S2CID 143563365 Vajda Zoltan 2013 Complicated Sympathies John C Calhoun s Sentimental Union and the South South Carolina Historical Magazine 114 3 210 230 JSTOR 23645453 Walters Raymond Jr 1945 The Origins of the Second Bank of the United States Journal of Political Economy 53 2 115 131 doi 10 1086 256246 JSTOR 1825049 S2CID 153635866 Wilentz Sean 2008 The Rise of American Democracy Jefferson to Lincoln New York W W Norton and Company Wiltse Charles M 1941 Calhoun s Democracy Journal of Politics 3 2 210 223 doi 10 2307 2125432 JSTOR 2125432 S2CID 154416098 Wiltse Charles M 1948 John C Calhoun Nullifier 1829 1839 Indianapolis IN Bobbs Merrill Wiltse Charles M 1951 John C Calhoun Sectionalist 1840 1850 Indianapolis IN Bobbs Merrill Wood W Kirk 2009 History and Recovery of the Past John C Calhoun and the Origins of Nullification in South Carolina 1819 1828 Southern Studies 16 46 68 External links editListen to this article 1 hour and 17 minutes source source nbsp This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 28 February 2019 2019 02 28 and does not reflect subsequent edits Audio help More spoken articles Biography at the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Works by John C Calhoun at Project Gutenberg Works by John C Calhoun at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Works by or about John C Calhoun at Internet Archive John C Calhoun A Resource Guide from the Library of Congress University of Virginia John C Calhoun Timeline quotes amp contemporaries via University of Virginia Other images via The College of New Jersey John C Calhoun Bust of John C Calhoun John C Calhoun Birthplace of Calhoun Historical Marker The Law Offices of John C Calhoun Monument Disquisition on Government and other papers by John Calhoun John C Calhoun Papers at Clemson University s Special Collections Library 2015 petition to Charleston City Council to change the name of Calhoun StreetU S House of RepresentativesPreceded byJoseph Calhoun Member of the U S House of Representativesfrom South Carolina s 6th congressional district1811 1817 Succeeded byEldred SimkinsPolitical officesPreceded byGeorge GrahamActing United States Secretary of War1817 1825 Succeeded byJames BarbourPreceded byDaniel D Tompkins Vice President of the United States1825 1832 Succeeded byMartin Van BurenPreceded byAbel P Upshur United States Secretary of State1844 1845 Succeeded byJames BuchananParty political officesPreceded byDaniel D Tompkins Democratic Republican nominee for Vice President of the United States 1824 Served alongside Albert Gallatin withdrew Nathaniel Macon Nathan Sanford Position abolishedNew political party Democratic nominee for Vice President of the United States1828 Succeeded byMartin Van BurenU S SenatePreceded byRobert Y Hayne U S Senator Class 2 from South Carolina1832 1843 Served alongside Stephen Miller William C Preston George McDuffie Succeeded byDaniel Elliott HugerPreceded byDaniel Elliott Huger U S Senator Class 2 from South Carolina1845 1850 Served alongside George McDuffie Andrew Butler Succeeded byFranklin H ElmorePreceded byLevi Woodbury Chair of the Senate Finance Committee1845 1846 Succeeded byDixon Hall LewisNotes and references1 The Democratic Republican Party split in the 1824 election fielding four separate candidates Portals nbsp Connecticut nbsp Film nbsp Politics nbsp Religion nbsp United StatesJohn C Calhoun at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Textbooks from Wikibooks nbsp Data from Wikidata Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John C Calhoun amp oldid 1206483425, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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