Fillmores Political History And Position George Law And Chauncey Shaffers Re

Cover Fillmores Political History And Position George Law And Chauncey Shaffers Re
Fillmores Political History And Position George Law And Chauncey Shaffers Re
Edwin Barber Morgan
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It was at the end of his administration that honest John Davis of Massachusetts, with bowed head and desponding heart, made the memorable declaration that "slavery rule* everything. " A distinguished member of thU House from Maine, Mr. Washburn, has in- formed the public that Mr. Davis said to him. That he felt himself as much a stranger in th* White House after the accession of Mr. Fill- more, as he did during the administration of Mr. Polk. What was true of Mr. Davis, the tried and trusted le...ader of the Whigs of Mas- sachusetts, was true of all the Whigs of the North who held fast to old principles. Mr. Fillmore received his reward in the unani- mous support of the South in the Whig con- vention of 1852. But between himself and the true Whigs of the North, he had, with his own hands, erected an impassable wall of separation.
No personal disappointments could justify Mr. Fillmore in forming his new alliances against Gen. Taylor, but in truth, nothing had occurred of which he had the least right to complain.


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