Millard Fillmore, the second of eight children, was born into an impoverished family on January 7,
1800. He died on March 8, 1874. His family's small farm in upstate Cayuga County, New York, could
not support them, and Fillmore's father apprenticed his son to a clothmaker, a brutal
apprenticeship that stopped just short of slavery. Fillmore taught himself to read, stealing books
on occasion, and finally managed to borrow thirty dollars and pay his obligation to the
clothmaker. Free, he walked one hundred miles to get back home to his family.
He was obsessed with educating himself. He pored over every book he could get his hands on and
attended school in a nearby town for six months. His teacher, Abigail Powers, encouraged and
helped him. She would prove to be the most influential person in his life. She was only nineteen
-- not even two years older than her pupil. After Fillmore received a clerkship with a local
judge, he began to court Abigail Powers. The couple married in 1826.
A few months after the marriage, a strange incident catapulted Fillmore into politics. Many of the
era's ruling politicians were Freemasons, including General Andrew Jackson, the most popular man
in America at the time. A man named William Morgan, a disaffected Mason evidently readying an
exposé of the organization, was allegedly kidnapped and never seen again. Widespread suspicion
arose that Masonic interests were behind Morgan's disappearance, and soon an Anti-Masonic Party
arose to combat the fraternal order's political influence. One hotbed of the new party lay in
western New York, and Fillmore joined it.
As a young lawyer, Fillmore was approached by a fledgling political party and asked to run for the
New York State Assembly. In 1829, he began the first of three terms in the assembly, where he
sponsored a substantial amount of legislation. In 1832, Millard Fillmore was elected to the U.S.
House of Representatives.
At that time, Andrew Jackson was President. Jackson's repeated clashes with Congress and his
ambitious attempts to expand presidential power united several parties against him. Fillmore's own
Anti-Masonic Party merged with the Whigs, which represented the older, more entrenched power
structure and opposed everything that Jackson and the Democrats represented. In 1843, at the end
of four terms in Congress, which were interrupted by one defeat, Fillmore resigned from the
legislature. After unsuccessfully lobbying for the vice presidential nomination on the Whig ticket
with Henry Clay and losing an election for governor of New York, both in 1844, Fillmore was
elected New York state comptroller, or chief financial officer, in 1847. He won this election by
such a wide margin that he was immediately considered a prospect for national office.
The Whigs selected the military hero General Zachary Taylor as their presidential nominee for the
election of 1848. The nomination of a slave owner who held property in Louisiana, Kentucky, and
Mississippi infuriated abolitionist Whigs from the North. The party decided to balance the ticket
by putting a Northerner in the vice presidential slot. Hence, Fillmore was chosen.
The Taylor-Fillmore ticket won a bitterly fought election over the Democratic ticket led by
Michigan senator Lewis Cass. Taylor and Fillmore were an odd match -- the products of very
different backgrounds and educations and far apart on the issues of the day. The two men did not
meet until after the election and did not hit it off when they did. In a short time, Fillmore
found himself excluded from the councils of power, relegated to his role as president of the
Senate.
The critical issue facing President Taylor was slavery. Henry Clay had crafted a series of
proposals into an omnibus bill that became known as the Compromise of 1850, a patchwork of
legislation that would admit California as a new free state; organize New Mexico and Utah, the
remainder of the Mexican Cession, as territories on the basis of popular sovereignty; and readjust
the disputed boundary between Texas and New Mexico. The compromise also established a fugitive
slave law that guaranteed that runaway slaves apprehended anywhere in the United States would be
returned to their owners. Taylor refused to take a stand, and the compromise bill was stalled in
endless debates in the Senate by mid-1850. But then the unthinkable happened: the President died,
possibly of cholera.
As President, Fillmore strongly supported the compromise. Allying himself with the Democratic
Senator Stephen Douglas and appointing the pro-compromise Whig Daniel Webster as his secretary of
state, Fillmore engineered its passage. By forcing these issues, Fillmore believed he had helped
to safeguard the Union, but it soon became clear that the compromise, rather than satisfying
anyone, gave everyone something to hate. Under the strains of the failed agreement, the Whig Party
began to come apart at the seams.
On the international stage, Fillmore dispatched Commodore Perry to "open" Japan to Western trade
and worked to keep the Hawaiian Islands out of European hands. He refused to back an invasion of
Cuba by a group of Southern adventurers who wanted to expand the South into a slave-based
Caribbean empire. This "filibustering" expedition failed, and Fillmore took the blame from
Southerners. At the same time, he offended Northerners by enforcing the Fugitive Slave Law in
their region. Weary and dispirited, he tried to decline to run again but was prevailed upon to
allow his name to be put forward -- only to lose the nomination to General Winfield Scott. Shortly
thereafter, his beloved Abigail died, followed by his twenty-two-year-old daughter Mary.
In 1856, he ran for election as the presidential candidate of the Whig-American Party, a fusion of
the remaining Whigs and the anti-immigrant American (nicknamed "Know-Nothing") Party. He won the
electoral college votes of Maryland and 21 percent of the popular vote. But the newly organized
Republican Party, even in defeat, eclipsed Fillmore and the Whigs, winning 33 percent of the vote,
and Fillmore's poor performance marked the end of his party. Millard Fillmore died of a stroke on
March on March 8, 1874, in Buffalo, New York.