Mexico, and establishing commerce on the great lakes. He was an eminent
specie advocate; so vehement was he that he became known as "
," and it was through his influence that the forty-ninth parallel was
decided upon as the northern boundary of Oregon. He opposed the fugitive
slave law, and openly denounced nullification views wherever expressed.
Nothing but his known opposition to the extension
of slavery caused his
final defeat in the legislature when that body chose another to succeed him
in the United States senate.
Thus in defence of human liberty ended his splendid career of thirty years
in the upper house, struck down by the frown of demagogism. Two years
later he was elected to the House of Representatives, where he did noble
work in opposition to the Kansas-Nebraska act, denouncing it as a violation
of the Missouri Compromise, and was defeated as a candidate for congress
in the next campaign. After two years devotion
to literature he was a
candidate for governor of his State, but was defeated by a third ticket being
placed in the field. He was the popular candidate, however, of the three,
against great odds being defeated by only a few votes.
During this year he supported Mr. Buchanan for the presidency against his
son-in-law, Mr. Fremont. He now retired
permanently from public life,
devoting his exclusive attention to literature, and his "Thirty Years View; or
a History of the Working of the United States Government for Thirty Years
from 1820 to 1850," was a masterly piece of literature, and reached a
mammoth sale; more than sixty thousand
copies being sold when first
issued. When this was finished he immediately began another, "An
Abridgment of the Debates of Congress from 1789 to 1850." Although at
the advanced age of seventy-six, he labored at this task daily, the latter part
of which was dictated while on his death-bed,
and while he could speak
only in whispers. Surely he deserved the success which had attended his
efforts. He died in Washington on the 10th day of April, 1858.
He had a large and grandly proportioned head, and was a most aggressive
debater. It was in the Expunging Resolution
and the exciting debates in
which he bore so prominent a part that he gained his greatest reputation.
This bill and the manner in which he managed its course through the senate,
securing its adoption against the combined effort of such men as Clay,
Webster and Calhoun illustrates the characteristics of the man more clearly
than anything that could be said of him. When reading the life of Andrew
Jackson the reader will remember that the senate passed a resolution
condemning
the action of the president, Mr. Jackson, in regard to the
distribution of the public funds in the following language:
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