Unionist Party (United States)
Unionist Party | |
---|---|
Historic leader | John S. Carlile |
Founded | 1850 |
Dissolved | 1861 |
Succeeded by | Unconditional Union Party |
Ideology |
Big tent Pro-Compromise Anti-Secession |
The Unionist Party was a political label adopted at various times in the United States by opponents of secession. It was used primarily by Southerners who did not want to affiliate with the Republicans, or wished to win over anti-secession Democrats.
The label first appeared 1850, during the dispute over the Compromise of 1850. Southerners who supported the Compromise (mainly Whigs) adopted the Unionist label to win over pro-Compromise Democrats and defeat anti-Compromise Democrats. The name change emphasized the Compromise issue, and implied that ordinary Whig political issues, such as the tariff, had been set aside.
By 1860, the Whig Party was defunct. A group of former Whigs formed the Constitutional Union Party, with John Bell as candidate for president. Also, as in 1850, ex-Whigs and anti-secession Democrats combined as "Unionists" to oppose secessionists in state elections, especially in Kentucky, Maryland, Missouri, and Virginia, where the Republican Party label was still toxic. Bell's candidacy was ineffective, but the state strategy proved successful as the American Civil War began in 1861.
In Missouri, the Unionists coalesced into an Unconditional Union Party. After Federal troops expelled pro-secession Governor Claiborne Jackson, the state legislature chose a new "Unionist" governor. "Unionist" candidates won state elections in Kentucky and Maryland. In Virginia, state legislators from western Virginia declared secession void, and chose a "Unionist" government; they subsequently elected "Unionist" U.S. Senators as well. When the state of West Virginia was created in 1863, its officeholders were elected as "Unionists".
Even in the North, Republicans and War Democrats used the Unionist label extensively, especially after 1862.
For the Presidential election of 1864, a similar label, the National Union Party, was adopted by the Republican Party. The Republicans were joined by many War Democrats, including Andrew Johnson of Tennessee, who was the candidate for vice president.
With the end of the war in 1865, the Unionist designation became obsolete. Some War Democrats became Republicans; others returned to the Democratic Party.
Lists of Unionists
The lists below are of U.S. Senators and Representatives elected as "Unionist" during the Civil War.
Union Party Senators:[1]
- John Snyder Carlile
- Garrett Davis
- John Brooks Henderson
- Thomas Holliday Hicks
- Waitman Thomas Willey
- Robert Wilson
- Joseph Albert Wright
Union Party Representatives:[2]
- Jacob B. Blair
- George Washington Bridges
- William Gay Brown
- George H. Browne
- Charles Benedict Calvert
- Samuel L. Casey
- Andrew Jackson Clements
- John Woodland Crisfield
- John Jordan Crittenden
- George W. Dunlap
- George Purnell Fisher
- Benjamin Franklin Flanders
- Henry Grider
- Michael Hahn
- Aaron Harding
- Richard Almgill Harrison
- James Streshly Jackson
- Cornelius Lawrence Ludlow Leary
- Robert Mallory
- Henry May
- Horace Maynard
- Lewis McKenzie
- John William Menzies
- Thomas Amos Rogers Nelson
- Joseph Segar
- Benjamin Franklin Thomas
- Thomas Francis
- Charles Horace Upton
- William H. Wadsworth
- Edwin Hanson Webster
See also
- Anthony Kennedy, a senator from Maryland
- National Union Party (United States)
- Southern Unionist
Footnotes
- ↑ United States. Congress. Biographical Directory of the United States 1774 - Present. Office of the Historian. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on April 23, 2010. Retrieved April 15, 2010. (accessed January 15, 2013).
- ↑ United States. Congress. Biographical Directory of the United States 1774 - Present. Office of the Historian. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on April 23, 2010. Retrieved April 15, 2010. (accessed January 14, 2013).
References
- Silbey, Joel H., A Respectable Minority: The Democratic Party in the Civil War Era, 1860–1868. New York: W.W. Norton, (1977)