Online Encyclopedia

JOHN BELL (1797-1869)

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Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 686 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JOHN BELL (1797-1869)  ,
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American
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political leader, was born near
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Nashville,
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Tennessee, on the 15th of
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February 1797 . He graduated at the university of Nashville in 1814, and in 1817 was elected to the state senate, but retiring after one
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term, he devoted himself for ten years to the study and the practice of the law . From 1827 until 1841 he was a member of the
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national House of Representatives, of which from
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June 1834 to March 1835 he was the
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speaker, and in which he was conspicuous as a debater and a conservative leader . Though he entered political
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life as a Democrat, he became estranged from his party's leader, President Jackson, also a Tennessean, and after 1835 was one of the leaders of the Whig party in the South . In March 1841 he became the secretary of war in President Harrison's
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cabinet, but in September, after the
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death of Harrison and the rupture between the Whig leaders and President Tyler, he resigned this position . From 1847 until 1859 he was a member of the
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United States Senate, and attracted attention by his ability in debate and his political independence, being one of two
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Southern senators to
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vote against the Kansas-
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Nebraska
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Bill of 1854 and against the
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admission of Kansas with the Lecompton or
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pro-
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slavery constitution in 1858 . Strongly conservative by temperament and devoted to the Union, he ardently desired to prevent the threatened
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secession of the Southern states in 1860, and was the
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candidate, for the
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presidency, of the Constitutional Union Party, often called from the names of its candidates for the presidency and the
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vice-presidency (
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Edward Everett) the " Bell and Everett Party," which was made up largely of former Whigs and Southern "Know-Nothings," opposed sectionalism, and strove to prevent the disruption of the union . The party adopted no platform, and discarding all other issues, resolved that "it is both the
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part of patriotism and of duty to recognize no political principle other than the constitution of the country, the union of the states, and the enforcement of the
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laws." Bell was defeated, but received a popular vote of 587,830 (mostly cast in the Southern states), and obtained the electoral votes of Virginia,
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Kentucky and Tennessee—39 altogether, out of a
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total of 303 . Bell tried earnestly to prevent the secession of his own state, but after the issue of President Lincoln's proclamation of the 15th of
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April 1861 calling on the various states for
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volunteers, his efforts were unavailing, and when Tennessee joined the Confederacy Bell " went with his state." He took no part in the
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Civil War, and died on the loth of September 1869 .

End of Article: JOHN BELL (1797-1869)
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