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Home arrow Places & Events arrow NH History arrow Franklin Pierce at the Seacoast
Franklin Pierce at the Seacoast Print E-mail
Written by Ray Brighton   

Franklin Pierce / SeacoastNH.com
PRESIDENTS IN PORTSMOUTH

New Hampshire’s only successful Presidential candidate was among the most unpopular in the nation’s history. But he found Portsmouth a friendly and safe harbor. Pierce had served here as a young lawyer and returned toward the end of his single term. Following the Civil War too, Pierce found solace here by the sea.

 

 

READ:  Presidents on bottle tops

Our only NH-born chief executive, Franklin Pierce (1804 - 1869) knew the Seacoast better than his three presidential predecessors -- Washington, Monroe and Polk. Pierce and his Bowdoin College pal Nathaniel Hawthorne were known to visit the Isles of Shoals. Hawthorne reluctantly agreed to write his friend's campaign biography. Who could lose with a slogan like, "We Polked you in 1844, We'll Pierce You in 1852"?

Never a popular choice, Pierce ironically ran for president against another New Hampshire candidate, J P Hale of nearby Dover, who opposed him as the Free Soil candidate in 1852. Pierce took over a country half the size of the one we know today as our national growing pains were at their peak. His own presidential troubles began when his son was killed by a train as the new President and his wife Jane arrived in Washington, DC. Too grief-stricken to attend the inauguration, she stayed out of public view for the next two years. -- JDR

FRANKLIN PIERCE IN PORTSMOUTH
By Raymond Brighton

Presient Pierce/ White HousePop quiz: Who was the first president to take a sea voyage on a naval warship? Also, who was the first president to send American troops into Nicaragua? And who was the only president ever elected from New Hampshire? If your answers were all "Franklin Pierce" give yourself a gold star.

Franklin Pierce, a desperate choice by the Democrats for the 1852 presidential nomination, surprised even himself by winning the election. He served a single term that historians frequently consider a major step toward the Civil War.

Nearing the end of his term in 1856, with James Buchanan the Democratic choice to succeed him, President Pierce visited his home in Concord, NH. He arrived in the state capital on October 3, and thousands thronged the streets to welcome their Native Son. The Chronicle reported: "The President was dressed in black-though he stated, in answer to many friendly inquiries, that his health was good, he looked pale, but seemed highly gratified by the reception he had received."

That same week Portsmouth was staging a two-day centennial of the release of its first newspaper, the NH Gazette, so President Pierce was belatedly invited. Pierce couldn't work the event into his schedule, but promised by telegraph to visit the Seacoast on Wednesday October 8, before returning to Washington. Portsmouth Mayor Richard Jenness immediately sent a committee of three to Concord to accompany the president to Portsmouth.

A Peaceful Visit on the Edge of War

Despite the lack of public notice, a decent hastily-assembled crowd of gentlemen and women were on hand to meet the presidential train at 1p.m.

Following a 21-gun salute, the President ascended to the platform, in front of which a quasi-military outfit, the Buchanan Guards, had been drawn up and came to present arms. Mayor Jenness gave a mercifully brief speech of welcome -- steering clear of unpopular topics. Even in his own home state, Franklin Pierce was not always loved.

He said:

"Whatever differences of opinion there may have been in regard to some of the measures of your administration, none will deny that it has been distinguished for industry, economy and a marked and successful foreign policy, as well as fidelity to the great fundamental Principle that lies at the base of this government, the right of the people to govern them- selves. Strike from the fair fabric of this union this foundation principle, and the beauty and symmetry of the whole procedure is gone forever ."

Before going any further it should be emphasized that Franklin Pierce was the only president of the United States who actually ever lived in Portsmouth -- even though it was only a short span of years. His acquaintance with the town had begun after his graduation from Bowdoin College in 1824. He came to Portsmouth to read law, as was the custom then. Upon being admitted to the bar, he returned to the Concord area from whence he had come. Pierce had arrived in town a decade after the departure of Daniel Webster. Both men had schooled under the city's revered lawyer Levi Woodbury. It was Woodbury who had introduced President Polk on his visit to Portsmouth in the 1840s. Following in the footsteps of Daniel Webster who had lived in Portsmouth a decade earlier, Pierce also worked with the popular Judge Levi woodbury. In his brief remarks in 1856, President Pierce was able to touch on this familiar topic.

According to the Portsmouth Chronicle:

"The president was justified in extolling Levi Woodbury because it's quite probable that but for his untimely death in 1851, Woodbury might have been elected president, and not Pierce."

The Chronicle added:

"The president alluded in feeling terms to Portsmouth as the home of (John) Langdon, Col. (William) Gardner, Capts. (Thomas) Manning and Elijah Hall, true patriots and noble men. He spoke of his early acquaintance with Col. Gardner, whose lessons of wisdom and patriotism he could never forget."

Pierce had asked Mayor Jenness to keep his visit low-key so that he might visit a few old friends. With the formalities of the welcome out of the way, the presidential party left the depot area and, escorted by the Buchanan Guards, went to the Rockingham House, site of the current Rockingham Hotel, where he could get together with old chums.

CONTINUE Franklin Pierce Visits Portsmouth


 

Calendar
Greenability Lecture & Soup
May 12, 2008
EXETER -- Blue Moon Natural Foods, 8 Clifford Street, Exeter, celebrates its thirteenth year with “an intergenerational green initiative” that includes three different cooking series running through May. The anniversary schedule of events promoting h...

Sea Dogs: Celebrating 15 Years
May 13, 2008
PORTLAND -- Charlie Eshbach, President/General Manager, Portland Sea Dogs, will celebrate the 15th anniversary of the Sea Dogs with the publication of a new history of the team, “The Portland Sea Dogs: Images of Baseball.” FREE

LIVESTRONG Day
May 13, 2008
EXETER -- Wear yellow. Honor and support people affected by cancer in our community. Enjoy a new exhibition of art by cancer survivors. Learn about the Lance Armstrong Foundation's programs to unite people to fight cancer, and meet a member of the LAF s...

Be a Herbal Apprentice Course
May 14, 2008
CANTERBURY -- Fee: $175, members $160 Drive away the winter blues by delving into herbology. This course provides hands on experiences, making tinctures, soaps and herbal salts, for example, to connect you with the early spring. We will also concentrat...

American Independence Museum's Opening Day
May 14, 2008
The American Independence Museum opens for the season in Historic Exeter, New Hampshire. Museum hours are 10am to 4pm, with the last tours at 3:30pm.

Veggie Teens and Raw Food
May 14, 2008
EXETER -- Raise Your Vibe Wednesdays at Blue Moon. Blue Moon Natural Foods, 8 Clifford Street, Exeter, sees this spring as an opportunity to explore what each of us can do to make healthful choices for people and the planet. Some of these solutions com...

Writer Louise Erdrich
May 14, 2008
PORTSMOUTH -- One of the most gifted, prolific and challenging of contemporary Native American novelists, Award-winning novelist Louise Erdrich will be a part of our Writers on a New England Stage series on May 14. Her new original novel The Plague of D...

Meteors, Meteorites and Comets
May 16, 2008
CONCORD -- Planetarium Educator Bob Veilleux will explain why you can collect meteorites - but not meteors or comets. Learn about these fascinating solar system interlopers, where they come from, how you can see them, and how they are related. See and...

Lighthouse Buffet Dinner
May 16, 2008
The main event this evening will be the American Lighthouse Foundation's first “Lighthouse Trivia Challenge.” This will be a Jeopardy-style competition, complete with buzzers and sound effects. The winners of the early games will compete in a final roun...

Mother Courage
May 16 - 17, 2008
Our mainstage season wraps up in May with the Senior Youth Repertory Company production of Bertolt Brecht’s epic masterpiece Mother Courage and Her Children. Through Brecht’s stark vision, the play relentlessly questions the distinctions between war, bu...

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