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John Tyler

 
Who2 Biography: John Tyler, U.S. President
John Tyler
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  • Born: 29 March 1790
  • Birthplace: Greenway, Virginia
  • Died: 18 January 1862
  • Best Known As: President of the United States, 1841-1845

John Tyler was the 10th president of the United States. The child of an old Virginia family, he graduated from the College of William and Mary at age 17 (not an unusual age for that time) and went on to become a member of the U.S. House of Representatives (1816-21), governor of Virginia (1825-26), and a member of the U.S. Senate (1827-36). He was tapped by the Whigs to be the running mate of William Henry Harrison in 1840 -- not so much for his policies, but to draw support from Virginia and the south. Just one month into his term, Harrison died and Tyler became president. Tyler's years in office were rocky, and by the end of his term, neither the Whigs nor the Democrats supported him. He chose not to run for re-election. He was succeeded by Democrat James K. Polk. At the time of his death in 1862, Tyler was a member of the Confederate Congress, in revolt against the United States during the Civil War.

First Lady Letitia Christian Tyler died in the White House in 1842. Two years later, at the age of 54, John Tyler married 24 year-old Julia Gardiner... Tyler had 15 children, the most fathered by any U.S. president. His last child was born in 1860, when Tyler was 70 years old... Harrison was called "Old Tippecanoe" for his victory in battle at Tippecanoe Creek in 1811; that led to the famous 1840 campaign slogan, "Tippecanoe and Tyler too!"

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(born March 29, 1790, Charles City county, Va., U.S. — died Jan. 18, 1862, Richmond, Va.) 10th president of the U.S. (1841 – 45). He practiced law before serving in the Virginia legislature (1811 – 16, 1823 – 25, 1839) and as governor of Virginia (1825 – 27). In the U.S. House of Representatives (1817 – 21) and Senate (1827 – 36), he was a supporter of states' rights. Though a slaveholder, he sought to prohibit the slave trade in the District of Columbia, provided Maryland and Virginia concurred. He resigned from the Senate rather than acquiesce to state instructions to change his vote on a censure of Pres. Andrew Jackson. After breaking with the Democratic Party, he was nominated by the Whig Party for vice president under William H. Harrison. They won the 1840 election, carefully avoiding the issues and stressing party loyalty and the slogan "Tippecanoe and Tyler too!" Harrison died a month after taking office, and Tyler became the first to attain the presidency "by accident." He vetoed a national bank bill supported by the Whigs, and all but one member of the cabinet resigned, leaving him without party support. Nonetheless, he reorganized the navy, settled the second of the Seminole Wars in Florida, and oversaw the annexation of Texas. He was nominated for reelection but withdrew in favour of James K. Polk and retired to his Virginia plantation. Committed to states' rights but opposed to secession, he organized the Washington Peace Conference (1861) to resolve sectional differences. When the Senate rejected a proposed compromise, Tyler urged Virginia to secede.

For more information on John Tyler, visit Britannica.com.

US Supreme Court: John Tyler
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(b. Charles City County, Va., 29 Mar. 1790; d. Richmond, Va., 18 Jan. 1862), statesman and president of the United States, 1841–1845. After assuming the nation's highest office upon the death of President William Henry Harrison in 1841, John Tyler found himself locked in a political struggle with his own Whig party. Tyler's unexpected ascension to the presidency horrified Senate Whigs led by Kentucky's Henry Clay, who fundamentally opposed the Virginian's states' rights political philosophy (see State Sovereignty and States' Rights). As a result of this party split, Tyler was the least successful of all presidents in securing confirmation of his nominees to the Supreme Court.

When Justice Smith Thompson died in December 1843, Tyler nominated his secretary of the treasury, John C. Spencer, a lawyer from New York. A political enemy of Clay, Spencer failed to gain Senate confirmation; subsequently, Tyler nominated another capable New York attorney, Reuben H. Walworth. Before the Senate could act, however, Justice Henry Baldwin died in April 1844, creating a second vacancy on the Court. To this seat, Tyler hoped to appoint Pennsylvania's James Buchanan, but, in keeping with the president's luck, Buchanan declined the position. Tyler then nominated Philadelphia lawyer Edward King, Senate Whigs, however, sensing a victory in the fall presidential election, postponed in June the nominations of both Walworth and King.

Although the Whig Party failed to capture the presidency, Tyler's political position continued to wane in the final months of his term. He withdrew both of his nominations in January 1845 and instead proposed Samuel Nelson, chief justice of New York. After the Senate speedily confirmed this choice, Tyler attempted to fill the second vacancy with Philadelphia lawyer John Meredith Read. Political success, however, did not come easy to Tyler. Dealing the president a final defeat, the Senate adjourned without acting on the nomination, leaving the seat to the choice of Tyler's successor, James K. Polk.

See also Nominees, Rejection of.

— Timothy S. Huebner

US Military Dictionary: John Tyler
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Tyler, John (1790-1862)10th president of the United States (1841-1845). Born in Greenway, Virginia, in 1790, Tyler practiced law before entering politics. He served in the U.S. House of Representatives (1817-1821), as governor of Virginia (1825-1827), and in the U.S. Senate (1827-1836). In 1840, Tyler was elected Vice President on the Whig ticket. When President William Henry Harrison died in office on April 4, 1841, Tyler became President. He clashed with Senator Henry Clay, oversaw settlement of the boundary disputes with Great Britain, and ended the Second Seminole War in 1842. In December 1845, shortly before leaving office, Tyler engineered a joint resolution of Congress annexing Texas. He subsequently presided over the 1861 Virginia Peace Convention but eventually went with the secessionists. He was elected to the Confederate House of Representatives but died in 1862 before taking his seat.

See the Introduction, Abbreviations and Pronunciation for further details.

Biography: John Tyler
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John Tyler (1790-1862), tenth president of the United States, was the first vice president to succeed to the presidency. His administration was marked by great conflict over the Texas question.

John Tyler was born on March 29, 1790, at Greenway Plantation in Charles City County, Va. His father, John Tyler, was governor of Virginia and a judge of the U.S. District Court. Young Tyler attended several preparatory schools and graduated from the College of William and Mary in 1807. He then studied law and was licensed to practice at the age of 19.

At 21 Tyler was elected to the Virginia House of Delegates; he served from 1811 to 1815. He subsequently was elected to the Virginia Council of State, to the U.S. House of Representatives, to the governorship of Virginia, and to the U.S. Senate (1827-1834). During these years Tyler emerged as one of the chief proponents of the states'-rights doctrine. He opposed internal improvements at Federal expense, a tariff to protect native industries, and a national banking system.

Like most politics of his day, Tyler's political activities were molded by the confused party situation existing during the 1820s and 1830s, as the long-dominant Jeffersonian Republican party dissolved. In the election of 1828 Tyler supported Andrew Jackson but found himself in opposition to Jackson soon after the inauguration. Tyler was against the President's threat to use force against South Carolina in order to enforce the tariff nullified in 1832. Tyler also attacked Jackson for what he considered to be his high-handed way of withdrawing governmental deposits from the Bank of the United States. Oddly, by alienating himself from the administration, Tyler found himself aligned with Henry Clay, Daniel Webster, and the other Northern nationalists who had created the Whig party.

In 1839 the Whigs, whose presidential candidate was William Henry Harrison of Ohio, sought to balance the ticket with Tyler as their vice-presidential candidate. Because his views bore little relationship to those of the rest of his party, Tyler skillfully sidestepped the major issues during the campaign. Despite his presence on the ticket, the Whigs lost Virginia; however, they won nationally.

Harrison's death a month after his inauguration created a minor constitutional crisis and a major political one. Tyler was the first vice president to succeed to the presidency, and the question was raised as to whether he was actually president or just the vice president acting as president. Tyler established the precedent that the vice president succeeded to the powers and honors of the office as if he had been elected in his own right.

Although Tyler inherited governmental powers, he lost control of his party. As a misplaced Democrat within the Whig party, he had great difficulty with the congressional leaders of his party, especially Henry Clay. The split was most evident on three issues: the Bank of the United States, the tariff, and a proposal to distribute among the states the revenue secured from the sale of public lands. Tyler twice vetoed the charter passed by Congress for the creation of a Third Bank of the United States. He made several positive suggestions, however, for a substitute - including creation of a Bank of the District of Columbia with less power than that of the Second Bank of the United States. Tyler also vetoed a tariff and distribution bill that he contended violated the principles of the compromise tariff of 1833 (which had ended South Carolina's nullification threat).

Tyler's increasing isolation from the Whig party was hastened by the resignation on Sept. 11, 1841, of all the members of the Cabinet appointed by Harrison, except Secretary of State Daniel Webster. Webster remained until May 1843 in order to complete negotiations with England over a long-standing boundary dispute. Tyler's final Cabinet was composed mainly of Southerners, including John C. Calhoun as secretary of state.

The latter part of Tyler's tenure was dominated by the Texas question. After Texas won its independence from Mexico, the Jackson and Martin Van Buren administrations refrained from annexation because of the position of the North, which opposed incorporating more slave territory into the United States. Rejecting this opposition, Calhoun negotiated a treaty of annexation. This was turned down by the Senate in 1844. The question played a part in the election of 1844, after which the administration pushed a joint resolution through Congress providing for the incorporation of Texas. It was passed on the last day of Tyler's administration.

As Tyler had had little hope of renomination by the Whigs in 1844, he had sought to build a third party composed of dissident Democrats and Whigs but soon abandoned his efforts. Tyler remained active in national politics. He supported the Compromise of 1850 and the Kansas-Nebraska Act. After South Carolina seceded in 1860, Tyler participated in the Washington Peace Convention that met early in 1861. When Virginia seceded, he supported his state. He was elected to the Confederate House of Representatives, but he died on Jan. 18, 1862, a month before that body held its first session.

Further Reading

Several good works deal with Tyler's life: Oliver Perry Chitwood, John Tyler: Champion of the Old South (1939), is a sympathetic portrait by a major historian, and Robert Seager, And Tyler Too: A Biography of John and Julia Gardiner Tyler (1963), is a warm portrait, which also includes much social history of the period. A good account of the politics of Tyler's administration is in Robert J. Morgan, A Whig Embattled: The Presidency under John Tyler (1954). The campaign of 1840 is detailed in Robert G. Gunderson, The Log-cabin Campaign (1957), and Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., History of American Presidential Elections, vol. 1 (1971). For biographies of persons who were important in the Tyler administration see Glyndon G. Van Deusen, The Life of Henry Clay (1937); Charles M. Wiltse, John C. Calhoun (3 vols., 1944-1951); and Richard N. Current, Daniel Webster and the Rise of National Conservatism (1955).

US Government Guide: John Tyler, 10th President
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Born: Mar. 29, 1790, Charles City County, Va.
Political party: Democrat, elected on Whig ticket
Education: College of William and Mary, B.A., 1807
Military service: Virginia militia, 1813
Previous government service: Virginia House of Delegates, 1811–16, 1823–25, 1838–40; U.S. House of Representatives, 1817–21; governor of Virginia, 1825–27; U.S. Senate, 1827–36; Vice President, 1841
Succeeded to Presidency, 1841; served, 1841–45
Died: Jan. 18, 1862, Richmond, Va. John Tyler was the first Vice President to succeed to the Presidency. He established the precedent that the successor becomes President and is not the Vice President “acting as President.” He also demonstrated that the constitutional prerogatives of the office can check and balance Congress, even when it is dominated by a party such as the Whigs, who insisted on their right to set national policy.

Tyler came from a family of wealthy Virginia plantation owners. He studied law under his father, practiced briefly, and went into politics. He served in the Virginia legislature and became governor in 1825, then U.S. senator in 1827. Tyler voted against the high tariffs of 1828 and 1832. He supported President Andrew Jackson's veto of internal improvements. But he broke with Jackson over South Carolina's nullification of, or decision not to enforce, federal tariffs, casting the only vote in the Senate against the Force Bill of 1833, which gave Jackson the power to use federal force to ensure compliance with the tariff. Tyler was instrumental in forging the compromise tariff of 1833, which ended the crisis. He voted against the re-chartering of the Second Bank of the United States and voted to uphold Jackson's veto of the bill, but he joined in the Senate censure of Jackson over the removal of federal deposits from the Bank. In 1836 he resigned his seat rather than adhere to the instructions of his state legislature to vote to expunge the resolution of censure, and he broke his connections with the Democratic party.

In 1836 Tyler ran for Vice President as a regional Whig candidate but lost to the Democratic ticket. In 1840 he was nominated for the Vice Presidency on the Whig ticket, along with General William Henry Harrison for President. Although opposed to the Bank, the Whigs were attracted to Tyler because they believed correctly that he could help carry Southern states.

President Harrison died of pneumonia within a month of taking the oath. John Tyler was in an awkward position. It was not clear from the wording of the Constitution whether the Vice President succeeded to the office of President or only exercised the “powers and duties” of the office, serving merely as acting President. Tyler took the Presidential oath and issued a statement to the American people couched in the form of an inaugural address. The House promptly passed a resolution referring to him as President, while the Senate defeated a resolution referring to him as Vice President. But much of the nation referred to Tyler as “His Accidency” and did not recognize him as President.

The Whig cabinet moved to take control from the President. At the first cabinet meeting, Secretary of State Daniel Webster told Tyler that his predecessor had settled questions by majority vote of the cabinet. Tyler responded that he alone would be responsible for his administration, and he called for the resignation of anyone who did not accept his view.

Tyler faced a dilemma: Should he allow the Whigs, led by Senator Henry Clay, to pass their economic program? Or should he pursue his own domestic program, which came much closer to the ideas of the Democrats? Tyler did not command a majority in Congress, and the Whigs proceeded to pass their own banking bill, which he vetoed twice. With the help of Democrats, Tyler's vetoes were sustained. The Whig cabinet resigned, and the Whig party issued a statement disassociating it-self from the Tyler administration. Whigs demanded that he resign and be succeeded by the president pro tempore of the Senate–a Whig who would hold office until a special election could be held. Tyler refused and made recess appointments of Democrats to his cabinet. Eventually, the Whigs passed a resolution of censure against Tyler, claiming that his use of the veto on policy grounds was unconstitutional.

Tyler was effective even though he was a President without a party. He resolved Dorr's Rebellion, a civil war between two political factions in Rhode Island. He reorganized the navy. A few days before he left office, Tyler won his most important victory: Congress admitted Texas to the Union.

Tyler was a political failure. He did not win the Democratic Presidential nomination in 1844. Historians generally rate him ineffective because of the deadlock in domestic policies. But he showed that a President without a shred of popular or congressional support could still exercise the power to stalemate congressional majorities.

After leaving the Presidency, Tyler returned to the Democratic party. He supported the Compromise of 1850 and the Kansas-Nebraska Act, both of which were designed to defuse slavery tensions and save the Union. In 1860 he spoke out against secession, believing a new compromise could be reached, and early in 1861 he sponsored the Richmond Convention, a last-ditch attempt to avert war between the regions. After the collapse of that effort, he urged Virginia to secede from the Union. He died on January 18, 1862, shortly after being elected to the Confederate House of Representatives.

See also Harrison, William Henry; Succession to the Presidency

Sources

  • Robert J. Morgan, A Whig Embattled: The Presidency under John Tyler (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1954).
  • Norma Lois Peterson, The Presidencies of William Henry Harrison and John Tyler (Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 1989)
US History Companion: Tyler, John
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(1790-1862), tenth president of the United States. Tyler was the first to ascend from the vice presidency through the accident of a chief executive's death. "His Accidency" was also only the second politician to switch parties before attaining the White House and the first to be driven from his party before departing Pennsylvania Avenue. Yet this partisan without a party and chief executive with almost no followers scored a presidential triumph so portentous as to make him one of the most important American presidents.

Tyler believed that these paradoxes stemmed from his devout adherence to states' rights. Born and bred to be a Virginia gentleman of the old school, he was educated at William and Mary, studied law, and swiftly ascended in state politics. He served successively in the Virginia House of Delegates, the U.S. House of Representatives, and the governorship of Virginia before being elected to the U.S. Senate in 1827.

Tyler's senatorial tenure coincided with Andrew Jackson's presidency. Tyler, seeking a less imperial president and a stronger states' rights policy, joined a small group of Jacksonians who deserted the fold and eventually became known as southern states' rights Whigs. In 1836, the Jacksonian-controlled Virginia legislature demanded and secured the recreant's senatorial resignation.

Tyler soon received compensation for his losses. In 1840, the Whig party, seeking a southern states' righter to balance William Henry Harrison's more nationalistic views, nominated Tyler as Harrison's running mate. Tyler, swept into subordinate office in the famous "Tippecanoe and Tyler Too" campaign, became president when Harrison died a month after the inaugural.

His Accidency's greatest problem was that Whig nationalists, in command of the party, would take no commands from a states' righter like Tyler. Twice Henry Clay drove nationalistic bank bills through Congress. Twice Tyler vetoed them. The second time, the Whig congressional caucus drummed the president out of the party. Almost the entire cabinet then resigned.

But the seemingly powerless president still remained potent enough to take advantage of the emergence of the Texas annexation issue. In the early 1840s, both major parties' leaders opposed adding the Lone Star Republic as a slave state to the nation, fearing a possible war with Mexico and an escalation of North-South tension. But Tyler was afraid that Texas, if not annexed, would ally with England to secure protection against Mexico and would be forced to emancipate its relatively few slaves in order to seal the English bargain. Tyler, determined to protect the South and states' rights, secured an annexation treaty and demanded that southern states' righters come to his aid.

Southern Jacksonians answered the call. They forced the nomination of an annexationist, James K. Polk, at the Democratic convention and won the election of 1844. Although still lacking a two-thirds majority to ratify Tyler's treaty in the Senate, the Democrats admitted Texas to the Union by resolution (which required only simple majorities in House and Senate) in late February 1845. A few days later, Tyler retired to his Virginia plantation.

The ex-president could only watch as consequences of his Texas prize escalated: war with Mexico, the crisis of 1850, a decade of sectional controversy. Tyler would not serve his people or his creed again until 1861, when he was chairman of the failed peace convention during the secession crisis. He subsequently voted for disunion in the Virginia secession convention and was elected to the Confederate House of Representatives. But the old states' righter was not destined to fulfill this last responsibility. John Tyler, the accident who not-at-all-accidentally helped precipitate the near-destruction of a nation, died in 1862 before taking the oath to serve the Southern nation he had come to prefer.

Bibliography:

Oliver Perry Chitwood, John Tyler, Champion of the Old South (1939); Frederick Merk, Fruits of Propaganda in the Tyler Administration (1971).

Author:

William W. Freehling

See also Elections: 1840; Texas Revolution and Annexation; Whig Party.


 
Columbia Encyclopedia: John Tyler
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Tyler, John, 1790-1862, 10th President of the United States, b. Charles City co., Va.

Early Career

Educated at the College of William and Mary, he studied law under his father, John Tyler (1747-1813), governor of Virginia from 1808 to 1811, and was admitted (1809) to the bar. A state legislator (1811-16, 1823-25) and U.S. Representative (1817-21), Tyler was an unswerving states' rights Democrat. He joined the condemnation of Andrew Jackson's actions in Florida and voted against the Missouri Compromise.

Governor of Virginia (1825-27) and a U.S. Senator (1827-36), Tyler reluctantly supported Jackson as the least objectionable of the presidential candidates in 1828 and 1832. Although he did not approve South Carolina's nullification act, he violently opposed Jackson's measures against it (see force bill). The President's fiscal policies further alienated him, so that he was eventually drawn to the new Whig party, joining its states' rights Southern wing, which differed with many of the nationalistic policies associated with the Clay leadership. He resigned from the Senate rather than abide by the instructions of the Virginia legislature to vote for the motion to expunge Henry Clay's censure of Jackson from the records.

Presidency

In 1840, Tyler was chosen running mate to the Whig presidential candidate, William Henry Harrison, and they waged their victorious "Tippecanoe and Tyler too" campaign. One month after his inauguration Harrison died, and on Apr. 4, 1841, Tyler became the first Vice President to succeed to the presidency. His antipathy toward many Whig policies soon became apparent (he had never concealed it), and a rift developed between him and Henry Clay, the party leader.

After his second veto of a measure creating a national bank with branches in the states (on the grounds that it violated the constitutional rights of the states), his cabinet, except for Daniel Webster, resigned (Sept., 1841). Webster stayed on as Secretary of State until the negotiations for the Webster-Ashburton Treaty with the British were completed (May, 1843). Bitterly denounced by the Whigs and with few friends among the Democrats, Tyler became a President without a party.

Nevertheless he accomplished much toward the annexation of Texas. Abel P. Upshur, Webster's successor, was killed when a gun on the U.S.S. Princeton blew up, and John C. Calhoun continued Upshur's negotiations for a treaty with Texas. The treaty was rejected by the Senate. Tyler then supported a plan for a joint resolution to annex Texas and had the satisfaction of seeing it accepted by Texas just before he left office in 1845. The completion of annexation was brought about under James K. Polk, Tyler's Democratic successor.

Later Career

Tyler, nominated by a small Democratic faction, had withdrawn from the 1844 election. In Feb., 1861, he presided over the unsuccessful conference at Washington that attempted to find some last-minute solution to avert the Civil War. Later, he served in the provisional Confederate Congress and was elected to the permanent Confederate Congress, but he died before he could take his seat.

Bibliography

See L. G. Tyler (his son), Letters and Times of the Tylers (3 vol., 1884-96, repr. 1970); biography by O. P. Chitwood (1939, repr. 1964); studies by R. J. Morgan (1954) and N. L. Peterson (1989).

Wikipedia: John Tyler
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John Tyler, Jr.

Daguerreotype of President Tyler taken in 1845 by Brady

In office
April 4, 1841 – March 4, 1845
Vice President None
Preceded by William Henry Harrison
Succeeded by James K. Polk

In office
March 4, 1841 – April 4, 1841
President William Henry Harrison
Preceded by Richard Mentor Johnson
Succeeded by George Dallas

In office
December 10, 1825 – March 4, 1827
Preceded by James Pleasants
Succeeded by William Branch Giles

In office
March 3, 1835 – December 6, 1835
President Andrew Jackson
Preceded by George Poindexter
Succeeded by William R. King

In office
March 4, 1827 – February 29, 1836
Preceded by John Randolph of Roanoke
Succeeded by William C. Rives

Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Virginia's 23rd district
In office
December 17, 1816 – March 3, 1821
Preceded by John Clopton
Succeeded by Andrew Stevenson

Born March 29, 1790(1790-03-29)
Charles City County, Virginia
Died January 18, 1862 (aged 71)
Richmond, Virginia
Birth name John Tyler, Jr.
Political party Whig, independent, Democratic
Spouse(s) Letitia Christian (dissolved by her death; 1813-1842)
Julia Gardiner (married at his death; 1844-1862)
Children Mary Tyler
Robert Tyler
John Tyler
Letitia Tyler
Elizabeth Tyler
Anne Contesse Tyler
Alice Tyler
Tazewell Tyler
David Gardiner Tyler
John Alexander Tyler
Julia Gardiner Tyler
Lachlan Tyler
Lyon Gardiner Tyler
Robert Fitzwalter Tyler
Pearl Tyler
(allegations of Tyler being the father of John Dunjee have also risen)
Alma mater The College of William and Mary
Occupation Lawyer
Religion Episcopal (possibly Deist)[1]
Signature
Military service
Service/branch Volunteer Military Company
Years of service 1813

John Tyler, Jr. (March 29, 1790 – January 18, 1862) was the tenth President of the United States (1841–1845) and the first to succeed to the office following the death of a predecessor.

A longtime Democratic-Republican, Tyler was nonetheless elected Vice President on the Whig ticket. Upon the death of President William Henry Harrison on April 4, 1841, only a month after his inauguration, the nation was briefly in a state of confusion regarding the process of succession. Ultimately the situation was settled with Tyler becoming President both in name and in fact. Tyler took the oath of office on April 6, 1841, setting a precedent that would govern future successions and eventually be codified in the Twenty-fifth Amendment. At 51 years old, he was the youngest U.S. president to take office to that point (whereas Harrison had been the oldest man to take office as president).

Arguably the most famous and significant achievement of Tyler's administration was the annexation of the Republic of Texas in 1845. Tyler was the first president born after the adoption of the U.S. Constitution, the only president to have held the office of President pro tempore of the Senate, and the only former president elected to office in the government of the Confederacy during the Civil War (though he died before he assumed said office).

Contents

Early life

John Tyler was born on March 29, 1790, in Charles City County, Virginia (the same county where William Henry Harrison was born).[1] Tyler's father was John Tyler, Sr., and his mother was Mary Armistead Tyler.[1]

Tyler was raised, along with seven siblings, to be a part of the region's elite gentry, receiving a very good education.[1] Tyler was brought up believing that the Constitution of the United States was to be strictly interpreted, and reportedly never lost this conviction.[2]

While Tyler was growing up, Tyler Sr., a friend of Thomas Jefferson, owned a tobacco plantation of over 1,000 acres (4 km2) served by dozens of slaves, and worked as a judge at the U.S. Circuit Court at Richmond, Virginia; Tyler Sr.'s advocacy of states' rights maintained his power.[1]

When Tyler was seven years old, his mother died from a stroke, and when he was twelve he entered the preparatory branch of the College of William and Mary, enrolling into the collegiate program there three years later.[1] Tyler graduated from the college in 1807, at age seventeen.[1]

Lawyer, the War of 1812, and early political career

John Tyler went on to study law with his father, who became Governor of Virginia (1808–1811). Tyler was admitted to the bar in 1809 and started practice in Charles City County. Tyler supported the United States' fight against Britain during the War of 1812, and he took command of a small militia company, though he saw no action.[1] He became a member of the Virginia House of Delegates in 1811, and in 1816 was named a member of the council of state.

U.S. House of Representatives

John Tyler was elected as a Democratic-Republican to the Fourteenth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of John Clopton. Reelected to the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Congresses, Tyler served in the House of Representatives from December 17, 1816, to March 3, 1821. While in Congress, Tyler was a leader in opposing the Missouri Compromise.

Virginia politics

Tyler declined to be a candidate for renomination to Congress in 1820 because of impaired health. Instead, he became a member of the Virginia House of Delegates from Charles City County, serving from 1823 to 1825. Tyler was then elected to be the Governor of Virginia (1825-1827). He was popularly known as voting against nationalist legislations. In 1829 and 1830, he served as a member of the Virginia state constitutional convention.

During this period, a major realignment of American politics was taking place. Following the 1824 election, the dominant Democratic-Republican party, of which Tyler was a member, split into two factions. The Andrew Jackson faction would shortly evolve into the Democratic party. The John Quincy Adams-Henry Clay faction would eventually coalesce into the Whig party.

Tyler had supported Adams in 1824. Afterwards, however, because Adams supported nationally funded internal improvements, Tyler joined the Jackson faction and became a Democrat.

U.S. Senate

Tyler was elected as a Jacksonian to the United States Senate in 1827. He was reelected in 1833 and served from March 4, 1827, to February 29, 1836, when he resigned.

Tyler supported Jackson in both the 1828 and 1832 elections, and backed him when he vetoed the Bank of the United States recharter in 1832. However, starting with the Nullification Crisis of 1832-33, Tyler drifted away from the Jacksonian Democrats. During the Nullification Crisis, Tyler opposed the force bill allowing Jackson to use armed force to collect tariff revenues in South Carolina. While other senators opposing the bill abstained, Tyler cast the only opposing vote and the bill passed 32-1.

By 1836, Tyler was closer to Henry Clay's newly formed Whigs than Jackson's Democrats. That year, Virginia's legislature instructed its senators to vote to expunge the Senate's 1834 censure of Jackson from the record. Rather than do so, Tyler resigned his seat.[3]

In the Senate, Tyler served as President pro tempore of the Senate during the Twenty-third Congress (the only President to have served as President pro tempore of the Senate), and was chair of the Committee on the District of Columbia (Twenty-third and Twenty-fourth Congresses), as well as the Committee on Manufactures (Twenty-third Congress).

1836 presidential election

In 1836, the new Whig party was not organized enough to hold a national convention and name a single ticket against Jackson's chosen successor, Martin Van Buren. Instead, Whigs in various states proposed three regional candidates, Daniel Webster, William Henry Harrison, and Hugh White. Tyler was named as a vice-presidential candidate and ran with Harrison in some states and White in others.[3] He finished third, receiving 47 electoral votes.

Return to Virginia politics

After leaving the U.S. Senate, Tyler served as a member of the Virginia House of Delegates in 1838 from Williamsburg. He was elected Speaker of the House in 1839.

1840 Presidential election

At the Whigs' convention, Tyler supported Henry Clay's presidential candidacy. After Clay was passed over for William Henry Harrison, Tyler was named as Harrison's running mate. Their opponent was Democratic incumbent Martin Van Buren.

The Whigs' 1840 campaign slogans of "Log Cabins and Hard Cider" and "Tippecanoe and Tyler too" are among the most famous in American politics. "Tippecanoe and Tyler too" not only offered the slight sectionalism that would further be apparent in the presidency of Tyler, but also the nationalism that was imperative to gain the American vote.

Harrison and Tyler won the election by an electoral vote of 234-60 and a popular vote of 53%-47%. On March 4, 1841, Tyler was inaugurated as the tenth Vice-President of the United States.

Vice-Presidency 1841

Largely ignored by the men who were pressuring Harrison to give them jobs, Tyler stayed in Washington, D.C. only long enough to be inaugurated Vice President on March 4 and to preside over the next day's Senate confirmation of Harrison's cabinet. On March 5 he returned to his home in Williamsburg, Virginia, not even staying through the close of the Senate's session.[4] Harrison sought little of Tyler's advice, and Tyler reportedly offered none.[4] Secretary of State Daniel Webster sent word to Tyler of Harrison's illness on April 1; two days later, Richmond attorney James Lyons wrote with the news that the President had taken a turn for the worse, remarking that "I shall not be surprised to hear by tomorrow's mail that Gen'l Harrison is no more."[5]. Tyler determined not to travel to Washington, not wanting to appear unseemly in anticipating the President's death. However, at dawn on April 5, two couriers from the State Department — one of them Webster's son — arrived at Tyler's home bearing the message that Harrison had died the day before.[4][6]

Presidency 1841–1845

"His Accidency"

1888 illustration of Vice President Tyler receiving the news of President Harrison's death from Chief Clerk of the State Department Fletcher Webster.

Harrison's unprecedented death in office caused considerable disarray regarding his successor. The Constitution of the United States stated only that:

In Case of the Removal of the President from Office, or of his Death, Resignation, or Inability to discharge the Powers and Duties of the said Office, the same shall devolve on the Vice President.

This led to the question of whether the office of the presidency itself "devolved" upon Vice President Tyler, or merely its powers and duties. The protocol was so uncertain that Secretary of State Daniel Webster discreetly requested the counsel of Supreme Court Chief Justice Roger B. Taney (who declined, citing concerns about the separation of powers).[7]

By the time Tyler arrived in Washington at 4:00 a.m. on April 6, he had firmly resolved that he was now, in name and fact, the President of the United States, and acted on this determination by taking the oath of office in his hotel room with the cabinet looking on, then immediately calling them into a meeting where he asserted his authority by terminating Harrison's practice of making policy by cabinet consensus.[7]

Tyler's claim was not immediately accepted by opposition members in Congress such as John Quincy Adams, who argued for Tyler to assume a role as a caretaker under the title of "Acting President", or remain Vice President in name. Among these was Whig leader Henry Clay, who had intended to be a "power behind the throne" and exercise great influence over his fellow Whig Harrison and now transferred that ambition onto his close friend, Tyler.

Once Harrison was dead, Clay was even more determined to hold sway over his successor. Amidst the constitutional uncertainties, Clay, "kept refering to Tyler as 'the Vice-President' and insisted that his administration would be more in the nature of a regency...[Tyler] quickly set the constitutional standard for later presidential successions by asserting that he was not merely "acting president" but had in fact acquired the full powers of the presidency...Tyler thundered at Clay: "Go you now, Mr. Clay, to your end of the avenue, where stands the Capitol, and there perform your duty to the country as you shall think proper. So help me God, I shall do mine at this end of it as I shall think proper."[8]

On June 1, 1841, impressed by his authoritative actions, both houses of Congress passed resolutions declaring Tyler the tenth President of the United States. Tyler had thus become the first U.S. vice president to assume the office of president upon the death of his predecessor, establishing a precedent that would be followed many times in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Yet it was not until 1967 that Tyler's action of assuming full powers of the presidency was legally codified in the Twenty-fifth Amendment.[9]

Although his accession was given approval by both the Cabinet and, later, the Senate and House, Tyler's detractors (who, ironically, would eventually include many of the Cabinet members and members of Congress who had legitimized his presidency) never fully accepted him as President. He was referred to by many nicknames, including "His Accidency," a reference to his having become President not through election but by the accidental circumstances regarding his nomination and Harrison's death. Tyler never wavered from his conviction that he was the rightful president, however; when his political opposition later sent correspondence to the White House addressed to the "Vice President" or "Acting President," Tyler had them returned, unopened.[10]

Policies

Tyler quickly found himself at odds with his former political supporters. Harrison had been expected to adhere closely to Whig Party policies and to work closely with Whig leaders, particularly Henry Clay. The former Democrat shocked Congressional Whigs by vetoing virtually their entire agenda. Twice he vetoed Clay's legislation for a national banking act following the Panic of 1837 — even after the bill had been tailored to meet his stated objections in the first veto — leaving the government deadlocked.

On September 11, 1841, following the second bank veto, members of the cabinet entered Tyler's office one by one and resigned - an orchestration by Clay to force Tyler's resignation (and place his own lieutenant, Senate President Pro Tempore Samuel Southard, in the White House). The exception was Secretary of State Daniel Webster, who remained to finalize what became the 1842 Webster-Ashburton Treaty, as well as to demonstrate his independence from Clay.[11] Two days later, when the president stood firm, the Whigs in Congress officially expelled Tyler from the party, and advocated a one-term limit for presidents and limitations on the veto power.[12] Tyler was now a president without a party, making him one of only three Presidents (along with George Washington and Andrew Johnson) to have no party affiliation during part of his term.

For two years, Tyler struggled with the Whigs, eventually nominating 22 men to the six cabinet offices. But when he nominated John C. Calhoun in 1844 as Secretary of State, to 'reform' the Democrats, the gravitational swing of the Whigs to identify with "the North" and the Democrats as the party of "the South" led the way to the sectional party politics of the next decade. Tyler's final Cabinet consisted of five Southerners and one Northerner (William Wilkins, Secretary of War).

On Tyler's last full day in office, March 3, 1845, Congress overrode his veto of a bill relating to revenue cutters and steamers. This marked the first time any president's veto had been overridden.

Rhode Island's Dorr Rebellion

In May 1842, when the Dorr Rebellion in Rhode Island came to a head, Tyler pondered the request of the governor and legislature to send in Federal troops to help it suppress the Dorrite insurgents. The insurgents under Thomas Dorr had armed themselves and proposed to install a new state constitution. Before such acts, Rhode Island had been following the same constitutional structure that was established in 1663. Tyler called for calm on both sides, and recommended the governor enlarge the franchise to let most men vote. Tyler promised that in case an actual insurrection should break out in Rhode Island he would employ force to aid the regular, or Charter, government. He made it clear that federal assistance would be given, not to prevent, but only to put down insurrection, and would not be available until violence had been committed. After listening to reports from his confidential agents, Tyler decided that the 'lawless assemblages' were dispersing and expressed his confidence in a "temper of conciliation as well as of energy and decision." He did not send any federal forces. The rebels fled the state when the state militia marched against them.[13] With their dispersion, they accepted the expansion of suffrage.

China, Hawaii, Britain, and the Native Americans

Tyler reportedly recognized the "coming importance of the Asian Pacific region to trade"[14], and sent a diplomatic mission to China, which successfully established consular and commercial relations between China and the United States, allowing the United States to gain the same trading concessions from China that Britain had.[14] Tyler also applied the Monroe Doctrine to Hawaii, told Britain not to interfere there, and began the process of annexing Hawaii to the United States.[14]

In 1842 the Secretary of State, Daniel Webster, negotiated the Webster-Ashburton Treaty with Britain which concluded where the border between Maine and Canada lay.[14] The issue of where the border lay had caused tension between the United States and Britain for a notable amount of time, and had brought the two countries nearly to war with each other on several occasions.[14] The treaty improved Anglo-American diplomatic relations.[14] However, Tyler was unsuccessful in concluding a treaty with the British to fix the boundaries of Oregon.[14]

Tyler brought the Second Seminole War to an end in 1842, and he also advocated the establishment of a chain of American forts from Council Bluffs, Iowa, to the Pacific.[14]

Impeachment attempt

After Tyler vetoed a tariff bill in June 1842, the House of Representatives initiated the first impeachment proceedings against a president in American history. A committee headed by former president John Quincy Adams, who was now a member of Congress, condemned Tyler's use of the veto and stated that Tyler should be impeached.[15] This was not only a matter of the Whigs supporting the bank and tariff legislation which Tyler vetoed. Until the presidency of the Whigs' archenemy Andrew Jackson, presidents vetoed bills rarely, and then generally on constitutional rather than policy grounds,[16] so Tyler's actions also went against the Whigs' idea of the presidency. Adams then proposed a constitutional amendment to change the two-thirds requirement to override a veto to a simple majority, but neither house passed such a measure.

On January 10, 1843, a resolution introduced by John Minor Botts, of Virginia, charged "John Tyler, Vice President acting as President" with nine counts of impeachable offenses, including corruption, official misconduct, and other high crimes and misdemeanors.[17] The resolution was defeated, 83-127.

In the elections of 1842, the Whigs lost control of the House (although they retained a majority in the Senate), and were therefore unable to pursue further impeachment proceedings.

USS Princeton accident

Second wife, Julia Gardiner Tyler

The last year of Tyler's presidency was marred by a freak accident that killed two of his Cabinet members. During a ceremonial cruise down the Potomac River on February 28, 1844, the main gun of the USS Princeton blew up during a demonstration firing. Tyler was unhurt, but Thomas Gilmer, the Secretary of the Navy, and Abel P. Upshur, who had succeeded Daniel Webster at the State Department nine months earlier, were instantly killed. Also killed or mortally wounded were Rep. Virgil Maxey of Maryland, Rep. David Gardiner of New York, Capt. Beverly Kennon, Chief of the Navy's Bureau of Construction, Equipment and Repairs, and the President’s valet, while some 20 others were injured.

Julia Gardiner, whom Tyler had met two years earlier at a reception, was also aboard the Princeton that day. Her father, David Gardiner, was among those killed during the explosion. Upon hearing of her father's death, Gardiner fainted into the President's arms.[18]

Tyler and Gardiner were married not long afterwards in New York City, on June 26, 1844.

Annexation of Texas

Tyler tried to form a new political party, but needed more support before it could be established.[19] Tyler hoped to gain such support by leading a drive for the annexation of Texas by the United States.[19]

Texas had declared independence from Mexico in 1836. Although Texas had succeeded in maintaining its independence as a result of its victory in the Texas Revolution, Mexico still considered it part of its territory, and threatened war with the United States should the US annex Texas.[19] Another problem was that many Americans worried that annexing Texas, which permitted slavery, would upset the sectional balance within Congress.[19]

Tyler believed that annexing Texas was a way he could achieve political respectability. His new party, the Democratic Republicans, used the slogan "Tyler and Texas!"[19]

In what is considered "a serious tactical error that ruined the scheme [of establishing political respectability for him]"[19], Tyler appointed John C. Calhoun in 1844 as his Secretary of State. Calhoun, as Secretary of State, was responsible for the negotiations with Texas over its admission to the Union. Calhoun was a leading advocate of slavery, and his attempts to get an annexation treaty passed were resisted by abolitionists as a result.[19]

Martin Van Buren also worked, behind the scenes of American politics, to ensure the annexation treaty was not approved, in an attempt to avenge his loss to Harrison and Tyler in the last presidential election.[19] Even with the support of Andrew Jackson for the treaty, the United States Senate rejected it, 16-35.[19]

Tyler wanted the issue of the annexation of Texas to be the foundation of his reelection campaign. After the annexation treaty was rejected, Tyler called for Congress to annex Texas by joint resolution rather than by treaty. Tyler eventually dropped out of the race, but after fellow expansionist James Polk won the election, Tyler announced in his annual message to Congress that "a controlling majority of the people and a large majority of the states have declared in favor of immediate annexation."[20]

In late February 1845, the House by a substantial margin and the Senate by a bare 27-25 majority approved a joint resolution offering terms of annexation to Texas. On March 1, three days before the end of his term, Tyler signed the bill into law.[19]

After some debate,[21] Texas accepted the terms, and entered the union on December 29, 1845, as the 28th state.

Reelection attempt

Uncle Sam and his Servants
An anti-Tyler satire lampoons President Tyler's efforts to secure a second term against challengers Whig Henry Clay and Democrat James K. Polk. Clay, Polk, John C. Calhoun and Andrew Jackson attempt to get in as Tyler pushes the door shut on them. Uncle Sam demands that Tyler stop and let Clay in.

Having left the Democrats and been renounced by the Whigs, Tyler's hopes for a second term depended on running at the helm of a third party. Tyler "created his own new party, built on a core of officeholders,"[22] and was nominated for the presidency in May 1844. At the same time, the Senate was considering Tyler's treaty to annex Texas, which it voted down the next month.

The major party nominees were widely expected to be former president Martin Van Buren for the Democrats and Tyler's nemesis, Henry Clay, for the Whigs.[22] Both Van Buren and Clay publicly opposed annexing Texas. Clay was indeed nominated, but Van Buren's stand cost him his party's nomination.[23] Instead, the Democrats nominated James Polk on a pro-annexation platform.

Accordingly, Tyler withdrew from the race in August 1844 and threw his support to Polk. Polk won a narrow victory in November, enabling Tyler to claim a popular mandate for annexing Texas.

Judicial appointments

Supreme Court

Two vacancies occurred on the Supreme Court during Tyler's presidency, as Justices Smith Thompson and Henry Baldwin died in 1843 and 1844, respectively. Tyler, ever at odds with Congress — including the Whig-controlled Senate — nominated several men to the Supreme Court to fill these seats.

However, the Senate successively voted against confirming John Canfield Spencer, Reuben Walworth, Edward King and John M. Read (King was rejected twice). One reason cited for the Senate's actions was the hope that Whig Henry Clay would fill the vacancies after winning the 1844 presidential election.[24]

Finally, in February 1845, with less than a month in his term, Tyler's nomination of Samuel Nelson to Thompson's seat was confirmed by the Senate. Nelson's successful confirmation was a surprise. Nelson, although a Democrat, had a reputation as a careful and noncontroversial jurist.

Baldwin's seat remained vacant until James Polk's nominee, Robert Grier, was confirmed in 1846.[25]

Tyler's four unsuccessful nominees are the most by a president.

Other courts

Tyler was able to appoint only six other federal judges, all to United States district courts:

Judge Court Began active
service
Ended active
service
Halyburton, James DandridgeJames Dandridge Halyburton E.D.Va. 18440615June 15, 1844 18610424April 24, 1861
Huntington, Elisha MillsElisha Mills Huntington D. Ind. 18420502May 2, 1842 18621026October 26, 1862
McCaleb, Theodore HowardTheodore Howard McCaleb E.D.La.
W.D.La.[26]
18410903September 3, 1841 18610128January 28, 1861[27]
Prentiss, SamuelSamuel Prentiss D.Vt. 18420408April 8, 1842 18570115January 15, 1857
Randall, ArchibaldArchibald Randall E.D.Pa. 18420308March 8, 1842 18460608June 8, 1846
Sprague, PelegPeleg Sprague D.Mass. 18410716July 16, 1841 18650313March 13, 1865

Florida

On Tyler's last full day in office, March 3, 1845, Florida was admitted to the Union as the 27th state.

Administration and Cabinet

The Tyler Cabinet
Office Name Term
President John Tyler 1841–1845
Vice President None 1841–1845
Secretary of State Daniel Webster (W) 1841–1843
Abel P. Upshur (W) 1843–1844
John C. Calhoun (D) 1844–1845
Secretary of Treasury Thomas Ewing, Sr. (W) 1841
Walter Forward (W) 1841–1843
John C. Spencer (W) 1843–1844
George M. Bibb (D) 1844–1845
Secretary of War John Bell (W) 1841
John C. Spencer (W) 1841–1843
James M. Porter (W) 1843–1844
William Wilkins (D) 1844–1845
Attorney General John J. Crittenden (W) 1841
Hugh S. Legaré (D) 1841–1843
John Nelson (W) 1843–1845
Postmaster General Francis Granger (W) 1841
Charles A. Wickliffe (W) 1841–1845
Secretary of the Navy George E. Badger (W) 1841
Abel P. Upshur (W) 1841–1843
David Henshaw (D) 1843–1844
Thomas W. Gilmer (D) 1844
John Y. Mason (D) 1844–1845

Four of Tyler's Cabinet nominees were rejected, the most of any president. These were Caleb Cushing (Treasury), David Henshaw (Navy) James Porter (War), and James Green (Treasury). Henshaw and Porter served as recess appointees before their rejections.

Tyler aggravated this problem when he repeatedly renominated Cushing. As a result, Cushing was rejected three times in one day, March 3, 1843, the last day of the 27th Congress.[24]

Post-Presidency

Tyler retired to a Virginia plantation located on the James River in Charles City County, Virginia and originally named "Walnut Grove." He renamed it "Sherwood Forest" to signify that he had been "outlawed" by the Whig party. He withdrew from electoral politics, though his advice continued to be sought by states-rights Democrats.

A daguerreotype of John Tyler circa 1850.

Tyler and the Civil War

On the eve of the Civil War, Tyler reentered public life to sponsor and chair the Virginia Peace Convention, held in Washington, D.C. in February 1861 as an effort to devise means to prevent a war. Tyler had long been an advocate of states' rights, believing that the question of a state's "free" or "slave" status ought to be decided at the state level, with no input from federal government. The convention sought a compromise to avoid civil war while the Confederate Constitution was being drawn up at the Montgomery Convention. When war broke out, Tyler unhesitatingly sided with the Confederacy, and became a delegate to the Provisional Confederate Congress in 1861. He was then elected to the House of Representatives of the Confederate Congress, but died in Richmond, Virginia before he could assume office.

Tyler's death was the only one in presidential history not to be officially mourned in Washington, because of his allegiance to the Confederacy. Tyler is also sometimes considered the only president to die outside the United States because his place of death, Richmond, Virginia, was part of the Confederate States at the time. Tyler's favorite horse named "The General" is buried at his Sherwood Forest Plantation with a gravestone which reads, "Here lies the body of my good horse 'The General.' For twenty years he bore me around the circuit of my practice and in all that time he never made a blunder. Would that his master could say the same."[28]

Personal life

Marriage and children

John Tyler was married twice and had 15 legitimate children.

Tyler's grave at Hollywood Cemetery

His first wife was Letitia Christian Tyler (November 12, 1790 – September 10, 1842), with whom he had eight children:

  • Mary Tyler (1815–47)
  • Robert Tyler (1816–77)
  • John Tyler (1819–96)
  • Letitia Tyler (1821–1907)
  • Elizabeth Tyler (1823–50)
  • Anne Contesse Tyler (1825)
  • Alice Tyler (1827–54)
  • Tazewell Tyler (1830–74)

Letitia died in the White House in September 1842.

His second wife was Julia Gardiner Tyler (July 23, 1820 – July 10, 1889), with whom he had seven children:

  • David Gardiner Tyler (1846–1927)
  • John Alexander Tyler (1848–83)
  • Julia Gardiner Tyler (1849–71)
  • Lachlan Tyler (1851–1902)
  • Lyon Gardiner Tyler (1853–1935)
  • Robert Fitzwalter Tyler (1856–1927)
  • Pearl Tyler (1860–1947)

His granddaughter Julia Gardiner Tyler Wilson, daughter of Lyon Gardiner Tyler, was one of the founders of Kappa Delta Sorority.

Tyler was a slaveholder for his entire life. John Dunjee claimed to be the illegitimate son of John Tyler, a child of Tyler and one of his female slaves. Early in his presidency Tyler was attacked by a newspaper alleging he had fathered (and sold) several sons with his slaves, which the Tyler administration linked newspaper the Madisonian replied to[29]. There was also a mulatto woman who frequently traveled with the Tyler family who was alleged to be the president's daughter.[citation needed]

As of 2009, Tyler has two living grandsons through his son Lyon Gardiner Tyler (1853-1935). Lyon Gardiner Tyler, Jr., was born in 1924, and Harrison Ruffin Tyler was born in 1928.[30]

Health and death

Throughout Tyler's life, he suffered from poor health. Frequent colds occurred every winter as he aged. After his exit from the White House, he fell victim to repeated cases of dysentery. He has been quoted as having many aches and pains in the last eight years of his life. In 1862, after complaining of chills and dizziness, he vomited and collapsed during the Congress of Confederacy. He was revived, yet the next day he admitted to the same symptoms. It was likely that John Tyler died of a stroke. His final words were "I am going now, perhaps it is for the best." Tyler is buried in Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond, VA.

Legacy

According to the White House's biography of him, Tyler "strengthened the Presidency"[2], but also "increased sectional cleavage that led toward civil war".[2] Tyler was and is also considered to have, by claiming "the right to a fully functioning and empowered presidency instead of relinquishing the office or accepting limits on his powers",[31] established a precedent for future Presidents of the United States.[31] With regards to Tyler's foreign policies, it is argued that "Tyler could claim an ambitious, successful foreign policy presidency, due largely to the efforts of Secretary of State Webster."[14] The city of Tyler, Texas is named after him.[32]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g "John Tyler: Life Before the Presidency". http://millercenter.org/academic/americanpresident/tyler/essays/biography/2. Retrieved 2008-11-16. 
  2. ^ a b c "White House Biography of John Tyler". http://www.whitehouse.gov/history/presidents/jt10.html. Retrieved 2008-11-15. 
  3. ^ a b The Complete Book of Presidents (2001 edition), by William A. DeGregorio, pg. 154
  4. ^ a b c "John Tyler: Campaigns and Elections". http://millercenter.org/academic/americanpresident/tyler/essays/biography/3. Retrieved 2008-11-15. 
  5. ^ Crapol, p. 7
  6. ^ http://www.senate.gov/artandhistory/history/resources/pdf/john_tyler.pdf
  7. ^ a b Hatfield, Mark O., with the Senate Historical Office. Vice Presidents of the United States, 1789-1993 (Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1997), pp. 137-146.
  8. ^ Borman, Walter R., "Polk" (Random House, 2008). p.58)
  9. ^ Crapol, p.13
  10. ^ Crapol, p.10.
  11. ^ A History of Presidential Elections, by Eugene H. Roseboom (1970 edition), pg. 124
  12. ^ The Presidents: A Reference History, edited by Henry F. Graff, 2nd edition (1996), pg. 147 (essay by Richard P. McCormick)
  13. ^ Chitwood pp 326-30
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i "John Tyler: Foreign Affairs". http://millercenter.org/academic/americanpresident/tyler/essays/biography/5. Retrieved 2008-11-15. 
  15. ^ The Presidents: A Reference History, edited by Henry F. Graff, 2nd edition (1996), pg. 148 (essay by Richard P. McCormick)
  16. ^ The Presidents: A Reference History, edited by Henry F. Graff, 2nd edition (1996), pg. 115 (essay by Richard B. Latner)
  17. ^ Presidential Fact Book, by Joseph Nathan Kane (1999), pg. 67
  18. ^ Paletta, Lu Ann and Worth, Fred L. (1988). "The World Almanac of Presidential Facts".
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "John Tyler: Domestic Policies". http://millercenter.org/academic/americanpresident/tyler/essays/biography/4. Retrieved 2008-11-15. 
  20. ^ The Presidents: A Reference History, edited by Henry F. Graff, 2nd edition (1996), pg. 153 (essay by Richard P. McCormick)
  21. ^ The Presidents: A Reference History, edited by Henry F. Graff, 2nd edition (1996), pg. 160-61 (essay by David M. Pletcher)
  22. ^ a b The Presidents: A Reference History, edited by Henry F. Graff, 2nd edition (1996), pg. 152 (essay by Richard P. McCormick)
  23. ^ A History of Presidential Elections(1970 edition), by Eugene H. Roseboom, pg. 127-28
  24. ^ a b http://www.senate.gov/artandhistory/history/common/briefing/Nominations.htm
  25. ^ http://www.senate.gov/pagelayout/reference/nominations/Nominations.htm
  26. ^ McCaleb was assigned as the judge for both the Eastern and Western Districts of Louisiana, a common practice at the time.
  27. ^ On February 13, 1845, the two District of Louisiana were re-combined into a single District; McCaleb was reassigned to this District by operation of law; on March 3, 1849, the District was again split, and McCaleb was assigned to the Eastern District only.
  28. ^ Paletta, Lu Ann and Worth, Fred L. (1988). "The World Almanac of Presidential Facts".
  29. ^ John Tyler. American-Presidents.com. Accessed 07 September 2009.
  30. ^ "Genealogy of John Tyler at Sherwood Forest Plantation". SherwoodForest.org. http://www.sherwoodforest.org/Genealogy.html. Retrieved 2009-06-19. 
  31. ^ a b "John Tyler: Impact and Legacy". http://millercenter.org/academic/americanpresident/tyler/essays/biography/9. Retrieved 2008-11-15. 
  32. ^ Lamb, Brian; the C-SPAN staff (2000). Who's Buried in Grant's Tomb?: A Tour of Presidential Gravesites. Washington, DC: National Cable Satellite Corporation. ISBN 1-881846-07-5. 

References

External links

Political offices
Preceded by
William Henry Harrison
President of the United States
April 4, 1841¹ – March 4, 1845
Succeeded by
James K. Polk
Preceded by
Richard M. Johnson
Vice President of the United States
March 4, 1841 – April 4, 1841
Vacant
Title next held by
George M. Dallas
Preceded by
George Poindexter
President pro tempore of the United States Senate
March 3, 1835 – December 6, 1835
Succeeded by
William R. King
Preceded by
James Pleasants
Governor of Virginia
1825 – 1827
Succeeded by
William Branch Giles
United States Senate
Preceded by
John Randolph
United States Senator (Class 1) from Virginia
1827 – 1836
Served alongside: Littleton W. Tazewell, William C. Rives,
Benjamin W. Leigh
Succeeded by
William C. Rives
United States House of Representatives
Preceded by
John Clopton
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Virginia's 23rd congressional district

1817 – 1821
Succeeded by
Andrew Stevenson
Party political offices
New political party Whig Party vice presidential candidate
1836³, 1840
Succeeded by
Theodore Frelinghuysen
Academic offices
Preceded by
George Washington
Chancellor of The College of William & Mary
1859–1862
Succeeded by
Hugh Blair Grigsby
Notes and references
1. Tyler did not take the oath of office until April 6.
2. Tyler was elected in 1861, but died before taking office.
3. The Whig Party ran regional candidates in 1836. Tyler ran in the Southern states, and Francis Granger ran in the Northern states.

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