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JOHN TYLER'S PRESIDENTIAL PRECEDENT


© John S. Cooper

John Tyler (1841-1845) is remembered for several reasons. He had more children (15) than any other President. Tyler was born while Washington was President; his youngest child (born when Tyler was almost 70 years old) lived to see Harry Truman in the White House. Tyler was also the only President to support the Confederacy during the Civil War (1861-1865), being a member of the Confederate Provisional Congress and a member-elect of the Confederate House of Representatives. But it was his very first act as President for which he is most remembered, merely declaring that he was indeed the President of the United States.

In 1840, the United States was treated to the most exciting presidential election campaign in its short history. The Whig Party won with its team of "Tippecanoe and Tyler, Too," William Henry Harrison and John Tyler. President Harrison proceeded to give the longest inaugural address in history, roughly an hour and forty-five minutes, which still stands as a record. He did it in bitterly cold weather and without a coat. Also the oldest President (until Ronald Reagan), the combination of the weather, the length of his speech and his age did him in. He developed a cold that turned into pneumonia he and died on April 4, 1841, one month after taking office.

The Whig Party was started as an accumulation of groups opposed to the Jacksonian Democrats. They realized that they could defeat Jackson only by joining together. As a result, the various groups that made up the Whig Party didn't really agree on anything. By 1840, they had agreed on several basic principles such as support for another Bank of the United States, high protective tariffs and internal improvements at federal expense. Tyler, who as a life-long Democrat opposed all those things, was placed on the Whig ticket to attract anti-Jacksonian Democrats to the Whig ticket. Other than helping Harrison get elected, no other thought was given to John Tyler.

With Harrison's death, the Whigs suddenly realized that they had made John Tyler next in line. The first and most important decision John Tyler made as President involved his becoming President.

Article II, Section 1, Clause 6 of the Constitution states: "In case of the removal of the President from office, or of his death, resignation, or inability to discharge the powers and duties of the said office, the same shall devolve on the Vice-President..."

The debate on Tyler's situation centered on a question of grammar. The Democrats claimed that "the same" that devolved on the Vice-President was the "duties of said office" while the Whigs claimed "the same" referred to "the said office" meaning the Presidency itself.

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Here's the follow-up discussion on this article: View all related messages

4.   Jul 30, 2002 4:27 PM
In response to message posted by FortBrooke1824:


Yes, Tyler had two wives. Between the two wives, Tyler fathere ...

-- posted by Mugwump53


3.   Jul 30, 2002 4:10 PM
I liked this article as well as your others Mug. Did not Tyler have two wives? I think i remember reading where one was in a wheel chair.
Perhaps one reason Tyler is forgotten is because of wh ...

-- posted by FortBrooke1824


2.   Jan 17, 2000 4:08 PM
Because of Tyler's party problems and his eventual support of the Confederacy, he is more forgotten than he should be. Remembering the Pre-Emption Act, the Webster-Ashburton Treaty, the China Treaty ...

-- posted by Mugwump53


1.   Jan 17, 2000 6:34 AM
This is one of the most important precedents set in U.S. history, yet it is very under-rated in our history books and collective memory. Most Americans probably wouldn't even recognize the name "John ...

-- posted by BrianTubbs





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